2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2019.06.007
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Depressive symptomatology in adolescents in Ghana: Examination of psychometric properties of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9

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Cited by 41 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Stigma was measured using a truncated (10 question) Berger HIV Stigma Scale. Included questions related to both internal or 'negative self-image' (four questions, 2,3, 7,12) and external stigma or 'public attitudes' (six questions, 9,10,14,16,20,32) and were analyzed in these two categories as well as the total score for interpreting results (scale range 10-40) [40] and were used in our prior research [9].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Stigma was measured using a truncated (10 question) Berger HIV Stigma Scale. Included questions related to both internal or 'negative self-image' (four questions, 2,3, 7,12) and external stigma or 'public attitudes' (six questions, 9,10,14,16,20,32) and were analyzed in these two categories as well as the total score for interpreting results (scale range 10-40) [40] and were used in our prior research [9].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) was used to measure symptoms of depression. The PHQ-9 has been validated relative to other diagnostic tools in several studies in Africa, [ 30 , 31 ] including adolescent populations in Kenya and Ghana [ 32 , 33 ] demonstrating high internal consistency with Chronbach alphas of > 0.70 [ 32 , 34 ]. This measure includes nine questions with a response range of 0–27 with a score of 10 or greater used as a screening threshold suggestive of moderate to severe depressive symptoms [ 30 , 31 ] and was used in our prior research [ 9 ].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The psychometric properties of the PHQ-9 have been evaluated with various population, including psychiatric patients [16,17], specific groups of medical patients [18-21], the general adult population [22,23], multicultural populations [24-27], the elderly [24], university students [13,25,26], and adolescents [27]. Although the internal consistency of the PHQ-9 has proved to be adequate (α=0.70–0.93) [13,16-27] and the results have indicated moderate to strong associations with related measures of depression and anxiety, analyses of the underlying factor structure of the PHQ-9 have been generally inconsistent. For example, several studies have suggested that a one-factor model reflecting unidimensionality of the depression construct provided the best fit to the data among primary care patients [14], U.S. and Nigerian college samples [13,25], general adults in Hong Kong and Germany [22,23], and adolescents in Ghana [27].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the internal consistency of the PHQ-9 has proved to be adequate (α=0.70–0.93) [13,16-27] and the results have indicated moderate to strong associations with related measures of depression and anxiety, analyses of the underlying factor structure of the PHQ-9 have been generally inconsistent. For example, several studies have suggested that a one-factor model reflecting unidimensionality of the depression construct provided the best fit to the data among primary care patients [14], U.S. and Nigerian college samples [13,25], general adults in Hong Kong and Germany [22,23], and adolescents in Ghana [27]. However, other studies in primary care settings with psychiatric patients [16,17], patients with coronary heart disease [18], traumatic spinal cord injury patients [19-21], elderly psychiatric patients in Taiwan [24], and female Latina university students [26] found that two-factor models distinguishing somatic and non-somatic domains best represented the PHQ-9 factor structure.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the PHQ-9 is a widely validated tool, the current study is among the first to apply a bifactor analysis to test its structure in the African context. In spite of the recent increase in the use of the PHQ-9 in epidemiological surveillance in Ghana, only one study [ 72 ] has examined the psychometric properties of the original English version of the PHQ-9 among a sample of Senior High School students in Ghana. The recent advocacy for the integration of mental health into primary health care to allow for comprehensive assessment and treatment of mental disorders, particularly in LAMIC [ 73 ], necessitates valid and reliable measures that are also culturally sensitive and has the ability to detect the presence of mental illness in nonclinical populations.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%