A structured interview guide for the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale.

The Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) is the most widely used scale for patient selection and follow-up in research studies of treatments of depression. Despite extensive study of the reliability and validity of the total scale score, the psychometric characteristics of the individual items have not been well studied. In the only reliability study to report agreement on individual items using a test-retest interview method, most of the items had only fair or poor agreement. Because this is due in part to variability in the way the information is obtained to make the various rating distinctions, the Structured Interview Guide for the HDRS (SIGH-D) was developed to standardize the manner of administration of the scale. A test-retest reliability study conducted on a series of psychiatric inpatients demonstrated that the use of the SIGH-D results in a substantially improved level of agreement for most of the HDRS items.

[1]  M. Keshavan,et al.  Response of thyrotropin to thyrotropin-releasing hormone as predictor of treatment outcome. Prediction of recovery and relapse in treatment with antidepressants and neuroleptics. , 1986, Archives of general psychiatry.

[2]  W. Coryell,et al.  Validity of the Hamilton endogenous subscale: An independent replication , 1986, Psychiatry Research.

[3]  K. Halmi,et al.  Anorexia nervosa. Treatment efficacy of cyproheptadine and amitriptyline. , 1986, Archives of general psychiatry.

[4]  I. Miller,et al.  The modified Hamilton rating scale for depression: Reliability and validity , 1985, Psychiatry Research.

[5]  M. O’Hara,et al.  Item characteristics of the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. , 1985, Journal of psychiatric research.

[6]  D. Cicchetti,et al.  Reliability of depression and associated clinical symptoms. , 1983, Archives of general psychiatry.

[7]  J. Fleiss,et al.  Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. Extracted from Regular and Change Versions of the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia. , 1981, Archives of general psychiatry.

[8]  J. Endicott,et al.  A diagnostic interview: the schedule for affective disorders and schizophrenia. , 1978, Archives of general psychiatry.

[9]  S. H. Rosen,et al.  Reliability of video taped Hamilton ratings. , 1978, Biological psychiatry.

[10]  M. Weissman,et al.  Symptom reduction in depressed outpatients treated with amitriptyline or maprotiline: repeated measurement analysis. , 1976, Comprehensive psychiatry.

[11]  B. Carroll,et al.  Depression rating scales. A critical review. , 1973, Archives of general psychiatry.

[12]  M. Hamilton,et al.  Development of a rating scale for primary depressive illness. , 1967, The British journal of social and clinical psychology.

[13]  A. Lewis Classification in Psychiatry , 1966, Nature.

[14]  M. Hamilton A RATING SCALE FOR DEPRESSION , 1960, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.