Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)

A number of assessment instruments have been developed as efficacy measures of geriatric depression in clinical trials but most showed several weaknesses, such as time-consuming administration, development and validation in younger populations, and lack of discrimination between anxiety and depressi...

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Main Authors: Michela Balsamo, Aristide Saggino, Leonardo Carlucci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02693/full
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spelling doaj-745d3d9b35624c4a92834a4ef6af45b82020-11-25T01:33:25ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782019-12-011010.3389/fpsyg.2019.02693490927Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)Michela BalsamoAristide SagginoLeonardo CarlucciA number of assessment instruments have been developed as efficacy measures of geriatric depression in clinical trials but most showed several weaknesses, such as time-consuming administration, development and validation in younger populations, and lack of discrimination between anxiety and depression. Among the extant self-report measures of depression, the 21-item Teate Depression Inventory (TDI; Balsamo and Saggino, 2013), developed via Rasch analysis, showed a satisfactory level of diagnostic accuracy, and allowed the reduction of false positives in test scoring in adult population. The present study explored the potential improvement in the psychometric performance of the TDI in the elderly by item refinement through Rasch analysis in a sample of 836 elderly people (49.5% males; mean age = 73.28; SD = 6.56). A resulting shorter version was composed of the best-fitting and discriminative nine items from the full form. The Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E) (E for elderly) presented good internal construct validity, with unidimensional structure, local dependency, good reliability (person separation index and Cronbach’s alpha), and no signs of differential item functioning or measurement bias due to gender and age (65 vs. 75+ years). Cut-off points and normative data provided could enhance the clinical usefulness of the TDI-E, which seems to be a promising valid and reliable tool for the screening of geriatric depression, with less risk of finding false positives due to overlapping of depression in elderly with other comorbid conditions.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02693/fulldepressionelderlylate-lifeadultsRasch analysisitem response theory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michela Balsamo
Aristide Saggino
Leonardo Carlucci
spellingShingle Michela Balsamo
Aristide Saggino
Leonardo Carlucci
Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)
Frontiers in Psychology
depression
elderly
late-life
adults
Rasch analysis
item response theory
author_facet Michela Balsamo
Aristide Saggino
Leonardo Carlucci
author_sort Michela Balsamo
title Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)
title_short Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)
title_full Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)
title_fullStr Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)
title_full_unstemmed Tailored Screening for Late-Life Depression: A Short Version of the Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E)
title_sort tailored screening for late-life depression: a short version of the teate depression inventory (tdi-e)
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2019-12-01
description A number of assessment instruments have been developed as efficacy measures of geriatric depression in clinical trials but most showed several weaknesses, such as time-consuming administration, development and validation in younger populations, and lack of discrimination between anxiety and depression. Among the extant self-report measures of depression, the 21-item Teate Depression Inventory (TDI; Balsamo and Saggino, 2013), developed via Rasch analysis, showed a satisfactory level of diagnostic accuracy, and allowed the reduction of false positives in test scoring in adult population. The present study explored the potential improvement in the psychometric performance of the TDI in the elderly by item refinement through Rasch analysis in a sample of 836 elderly people (49.5% males; mean age = 73.28; SD = 6.56). A resulting shorter version was composed of the best-fitting and discriminative nine items from the full form. The Teate Depression Inventory (TDI-E) (E for elderly) presented good internal construct validity, with unidimensional structure, local dependency, good reliability (person separation index and Cronbach’s alpha), and no signs of differential item functioning or measurement bias due to gender and age (65 vs. 75+ years). Cut-off points and normative data provided could enhance the clinical usefulness of the TDI-E, which seems to be a promising valid and reliable tool for the screening of geriatric depression, with less risk of finding false positives due to overlapping of depression in elderly with other comorbid conditions.
topic depression
elderly
late-life
adults
Rasch analysis
item response theory
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02693/full
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AT aristidesaggino tailoredscreeningforlatelifedepressionashortversionoftheteatedepressioninventorytdie
AT leonardocarlucci tailoredscreeningforlatelifedepressionashortversionoftheteatedepressioninventorytdie
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