Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression Inventory

Michela Balsamo, Aristide SagginoDepartment of Psychological Sciences, Humanities and Territory, G. d’Annunzio University of Chieti-Pescara, Chieti, ItalyAbstract: A small but growing body of literature suggests that the Teate Depression ­Inventory (TDI) may be an “objec...

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Main Authors: Balsamo M, Saggino A
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2014-06-01
Series:Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/determining-a-diagnostic-cut-off-on-the-teate-depression-inventory-a17097
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spelling doaj-2a09c5e89dfb4e23af4eba053b13a57e2020-11-24T23:09:41ZengDove Medical PressNeuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment1178-20212014-06-012014default98799517097Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression InventoryBalsamo MSaggino A Michela Balsamo, Aristide SagginoDepartment of Psychological Sciences, Humanities and Territory, G. d’Annunzio University of Chieti-Pescara, Chieti, ItalyAbstract: A small but growing body of literature suggests that the Teate Depression ­Inventory (TDI) may be an “objective” measure of depression compared with other commonly used scales. Furthermore, the TDI has strong psychometric properties in both clinical and nonclinical samples. The present study aimed to extend the use of TDI by identifying cut-off scores that could differentiate varying levels of depression severity in a group of clinically diagnosed depression disorder patients (N=125). Three receiver operating characteristic curve analyses indicated cut-off scores of 21 (sensitivity =0.86, specificity =0.94, and classification accuracy =0.90); 36 (sensitivity =0.84, specificity =0.96, and classification accuracy =0.92); and 50 (sensitivity =0.81, specificity =0.93, and classification accuracy =0.90), for minimal, mild, moderate, and severe depression, respectively. Results suggest that the TDI measures depression severity across a broad range with high test accuracy and may be appropriately used to screen for depression.Keywords: major depression, ROC curve, self-report scales, Rasch analysis, depression screeninghttp://www.dovepress.com/determining-a-diagnostic-cut-off-on-the-teate-depression-inventory-a17097
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Balsamo M
Saggino A
spellingShingle Balsamo M
Saggino A
Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression Inventory
Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment
author_facet Balsamo M
Saggino A
author_sort Balsamo M
title Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression Inventory
title_short Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression Inventory
title_full Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression Inventory
title_fullStr Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression Inventory
title_full_unstemmed Determining a diagnostic cut-off on the Teate Depression Inventory
title_sort determining a diagnostic cut-off on the teate depression inventory
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment
issn 1178-2021
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Michela Balsamo, Aristide SagginoDepartment of Psychological Sciences, Humanities and Territory, G. d’Annunzio University of Chieti-Pescara, Chieti, ItalyAbstract: A small but growing body of literature suggests that the Teate Depression ­Inventory (TDI) may be an “objective” measure of depression compared with other commonly used scales. Furthermore, the TDI has strong psychometric properties in both clinical and nonclinical samples. The present study aimed to extend the use of TDI by identifying cut-off scores that could differentiate varying levels of depression severity in a group of clinically diagnosed depression disorder patients (N=125). Three receiver operating characteristic curve analyses indicated cut-off scores of 21 (sensitivity =0.86, specificity =0.94, and classification accuracy =0.90); 36 (sensitivity =0.84, specificity =0.96, and classification accuracy =0.92); and 50 (sensitivity =0.81, specificity =0.93, and classification accuracy =0.90), for minimal, mild, moderate, and severe depression, respectively. Results suggest that the TDI measures depression severity across a broad range with high test accuracy and may be appropriately used to screen for depression.Keywords: major depression, ROC curve, self-report scales, Rasch analysis, depression screening
url http://www.dovepress.com/determining-a-diagnostic-cut-off-on-the-teate-depression-inventory-a17097
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