4.7 Article

The structure and dimensionality of the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self Report (IDS-SR) in patients with depressive disorders and healthy controls

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 125, Issue 1-3, Pages 146-154

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2009.12.020

Keywords

Mood; Anxiety; Arousal; Subscale; Questionnaire; Rasch

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development [10-000-1002]
  2. VU University Medical Center
  3. GGZ inGeest
  4. Arkin
  5. Leiden University Medical Center
  6. GGZ Rivierduinen
  7. University Medical Center Groningen
  8. Lentis
  9. GGZ Friesland
  10. GGZ Drenthe
  11. Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare (IQ healthcare)
  12. Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research (NIVEL)
  13. Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction (Trimbos Institute)

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Background: The Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self Report (IDS-SR) is a widely used but heterogeneous measure of depression severity. Insight in its factor structure and dimensionality could help to develop more homogeneous IDS-SR subscales. However previous factoranalytical studies have found mixed results, Therefore. the present study tested which factor structure underlies the IDS-SR and, in addition, if the factors can be used as unidimensional subscales. Methods: Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was done to identify the best-fitting factor structure. The study sample consisted of 2600 individuals (mean age 40.5 +/- 12.1). We assessed model fit in 4 groups: 957 Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) patients, 450 remitted MOD patients, 570 patients with an anxiety disorder and 623 healthy controls to test the consistency of model fit. Rasch analyses in the full sample were used to evaluate and optimize the unidimensionality and psychometric quality of the factors. Results: CFA indicated that a 3-factor model fits the IDS-SR data best and is consistent across groups, with a 'mood/cognition' factor, an 'anxiety/arousal' factor and a 'sleep' factor. In addition, Rasch analyses indicated that the 'mood/cognition' and 'anxiety/arousal' factors could be optimized to be used as unidimensional subscales. Limitations: The fit of only 4 models was tested, ranging from a 1- to 4-factor model. Conclusions: The IDS-SR is a heterogeneous instrument with a multifactorial underlying structure. It is possible to measure more homogeneous symptomatology with IDS-SR subscales, which could be useful in clinical practice and scientific research. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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