Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/24882
Title: Comparative validity and reliability study of the QIDS-SR16 in Turkish and American college student samples
Other Titles: Türk ve Amerikalı üniversite öğrencilerinde hızlı depresif belirti envanteri-özbildirim formu’nun (HDBE16-ÖF) karşılaştırmalı olarak geçerlik ve güvenirliği
Authors: Bernstein, Ira H.
Tavlı, Vedide
Ongel, Kurtuluş
Tavlı, Talat
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Eğitim Fakültesi/Eğitim Bilimleri Bölümü.
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Aile Sağlığı Merkezi.
Tan, Şeref
Mergen, Haluk
A-1204-2018
57225930534
27467601400
Keywords: Pharmacology & pharmacy
Psychiatry
Major depressive episode
Screening scale
Validity
Reliability
Depressive symptomatology qids-c-16
Self-report versions
Quick inventory
Psychometric evaluation
Bipolar disorder
Major depression
Common factors
Clinician
Criterion
Number
Issue Date: Dec-2011
Publisher: Küre İletişim
Citation: Mergen, H. vd. (2011). ''Comparative validity and reliability study of the QIDS-SR16 in Turkish and American college student samples''.Klinik Psikofarmakoloji Bulteni-Bulletin of Clinical Psychopharmacology, 21(4), 289-301.
Abstract: Comparative validity and reliability study of the QIDS-SR16 in Turkish and American college student samples Objective: To evaluate the validity and reliability of the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology, self-reported version, in a Turkish student sample (QIDS-SR16-T) by comparing it to (a) the American version (QIDS-SR16-US) and (b) the Turkish version of the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II-T). Materials and Methods: Slightly modified versions of the QIDS-SR16-T, and the BDI-II-T were administered to 626 outpatients at the Uludag University campus-based family health center. The QIDS-SR16-US was administered to 584 respondents at an American university. SAS and MPlus were used to provide descriptive statistics, classical exploratory factor analysis, and item response theory analyses (in the form of a multiple group confirmatory factor analysis). Results: The internal consistency (Cronbach a) of the QIDS-SR16-T was 0.77. Both QIDS-SR16 versions were unidimensional, but the BDI-II-T was not. The mean QIDS-SR16-T and QIDS-SR16-US item-total correlations were similar. The correlation between the QIDS-SR16-T and BDI-II-T was 0.72 (.90 when disattenuated). Multiple-group confirmatory factor analysis suggested that the QIDS-SR16-T and QIDS-SR16-US had the same factor loadings but different intercepts. This reflects group differences in level of depression, perhaps because the Turkish respondents, unlike their US counterparts, were seen in a medical context where illness-related depression is more prevalent. Scores on the QIDS-SR16-T and the BDI-II-T were also equated. Discussion: The QIDS-SR16-T has good psychometric properties and convergent validity with the BDI-II-T. Its use is recommended when a self-reported instrument is appropriate.
URI: https://doi.org/10.5455/BCP.20110223124825
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.5455/bcp.20110223124825
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/24882
ISSN: 1017-7833
Appears in Collections:Scopus
TrDizin
Web of Science

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