“…This latter point may be a critical factor, as modern scales that screen for depression/anxiety gain the attention of clinicians and assessment faculty. For example, instruments like the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD‐7: see Rutter & Brown, ; Plummer, Manea, Trepel, & McMillan, ), the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ‐9: see Quon et al., ; Sawaya, Atoui, Hamadeh, Zeinoun, & Nahas, ), the Anxiety Depression Distress Inventory‐27 (ADDI‐27: Garcia, Berzins, Acosta, Pirani, & Osman, ), and the Patient‐Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS: see Pilkonis et al., ; Schalet, Cook, Choi, & Cella, ), (some of which conveniently available at no cost), may offer alternative avenues for the efficient, brief assessment of anxiety and mood states. Moreover, more traditional instruments like the Mood and Anxiety Symptom Questionnaire‐90 (MASQ: see Schalet et al., ), the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS‐21: see Osman et al., ; Ronk, Korman, Hooke, & Page, ), and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS: see Turk et al., ) continue to garner research attention.…”