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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. The writer briefly compares two articles that test the reliability and validity of HDI as a measure of depression. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCHamDepTst.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale Clinical Interview," it can readily be agreed how each article title adequately indicates the texts composition. While Reynolds et al (1995) - whose
article is a revision from the original received in July of 1994 - delve deeply into what might be considered a more intricate look of how the then-new test format
stands up to the rigors of validity and reliability for the self-report measure of depression severity, Dozois (2003) clearly states as well, his intentions to analyze the knowledge, behavior and
capabilities of the Hamilton Depression Inventory as it relates to the test being, as he ultimately determines, "a reliable and valid instrument for the assessment of depressive severity" (p. 31).
By inquiring into multiple components of individual symptoms the HDI, as compared to other self-report measures of depression, allows for greater fidelity of symptom assessments (Reynolds et al, 1995,
p. 481). The ten-minute Hamilton Depression Inventory is generally designed for adults who are 1) at least eighteen years of age and 2) possess a reading level of at
least fifth grade (Reynolds et al (1995). Dozois (2003) test utilizes 249 students whose median age was nineteen and a half years old. Of the three levels of
self-testing available to respondents - a twenty-three point full, a seventeen point abridged and a nine point short form (Dozois, 2003; Reynolds et al, 1995) - the author randomly administered
an abridged - or simplified - version of the Hamilton Depression Inventory with several other self-report tests, indices and questionnaires that also measure the severity of respondents depression. Reynolds
et al (1995), by comparison, go into explicit detail of the Hamilton Depression Inventory and at the same time point out how this particular paper-and-pencil self-report is wholly different from
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