Dass Manual 2nd Edition

 
  1. Dass Manual (2nd Edition)

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This article may need to be rewritten entirely to comply with Wikipedia's. The may contain suggestions. (September 2009) DASS, the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales, is made up of 42 self-report items to be completed over five to ten minutes, each reflecting a negative emotional symptom. Each of these is rated on a four-point of frequency or severity of the participants' experiences over the last week with the intention of emphasising states over traits.

These scores ranged from 0, meaning that the client believed the item 'did not apply to them at all', to 4 meaning that the client considered the item to 'apply to them very much, or most of the time'. It is also stressed in the instructions that there are no right or wrong answers. Contents. Scales The sum of the relevant 14 items for each scale constitute the participants' scores for each of, and, including items such as 'I couldn't seem to experience any positive feeling at all', 'I was aware of the dryness of my mouth' and 'I found it hard to wind down' in the respective order of the scales. The order of the 42 items has been randomised so that items of the same scale are not clustered together.

Each of the scales is then broken down into subscales comprising two to five items each. The Depression scale has subscales assessing, devaluation of life, lack of interest/involvement, and. The Anxiety scale assesses autonomic arousal, effects, situational anxiety and subjective experience of anxious affect. The Stress scale's subscales highlight levels of non-chronic arousal through difficulty relaxing, nervous arousal and being easily upset/agitated, irritable/over-reactive and impatient. Purpose The main purpose of the DASS is to isolate and identify aspects of emotional disturbance; for example, to assess the degree of severity of the core symptoms of depression, anxiety or stress. The initial aims of the scale's constructions were to define the full range of core symptoms of depression and anxiety, meet rigorous standards of adequacy, and develop maximum discrimination between the depression anxiety scales.

While the DASS can be administered and scored by individuals without qualifications, it is recommended that the interpretation and decisions based on results are made by an experienced in combination with other forms of assessment. Development The Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scales were developed by researchers at the. The test was developed using a sample of responses from the comparison of 504 sets of results from a trial by students, taken from a larger sample of 950 first year university student responses. The test was then on a sample of 1044 males and 1870 females aged between 17 and 69 years, across participants of varying backgrounds, including university students, nurses in training and blue and white collared employees of a major airline, bank, railway workshop and. The scores were subsequently checked for validity against outpatient groups including patients suffering from anxiety and depressive disorders, patients, as well as patients undergoing treatment for, and depressive disorders. While the test was not normed against samples younger than 17, due to the simplicity of language, there has been no compelling evidence against the use of the scales for comparison against. The reliability scores of the scales in terms of scores rate the Depression scale at 0.91, the Anxiety scale at 0.84 and the Stress scale at 0.90 in the normative sample.

The and for each scale are 6.34 and 6.97 for depression, 4.7 and 4.91 for anxiety and 10.11 and 7.91 for stress, respectively. The mean scores in the normative sample did vary slightly between genders as well as varying by age, though the threshold scores for classifications do not change by these variations. The Depression and Stress scales meet the standard threshold requirement of 0.9 for research, however, the Anxiety scale still meets the 0.7 threshold for clinical applications, and is still close to the 0.9 required for research. References. ^ Lovibond, S.H.; Lovibond, P.F. 'Manual for the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales' (2nd ed.).

Sydney: Psychology Foundation. (Available from The Psychology Foundation, Room 1005 Mathews Building, University of New South Wales, NSW 2052, Australia). ^ Lovibond, P.F.; Lovibond, S.H. (March 1995). 'The structure of negative emotional states: Comparison of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS) with the Beck Depression and Anxiety Inventories'.

Behaviour Research and Therapy. 33 (3): 335–343. University of New South Wales Depression Anxiety Stress Scales External links.

Dass manual (2nd edition)

The Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS) was designed to efficiently measure the core symptoms of anxiety and depression and has demonstrated positive psychometric properties in adult samples of anxiety and depression patients and student samples. Despite these findings, the psychometric properties of the DASS remain untested in older adults, for whom the identification of efficient measures of these constructs is especially important. To determine the psychometric properties of the DASS 21-item version in older adults, we analyzed data from 222 medical patients seeking treatment to manage worry. Consistent with younger samples, a three-factor structure best fit the data. Results also indicated good internal consistency, excellent convergent validity, and good discriminative validity, especially for the depression scale. Receiver operating curve analyses indicated that the DASS-21 predicted the diagnostic presence of generalized anxiety disorder and depression as well as other commonly used measures. These data suggest that the DASS may be used with older adults in lieu of multiple scales designed to measure similar constructs, thereby reducing participant burden and facilitating assessment in settings with limited assessment resources.

Psychometric Properties of the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 in Older Primary Care Patients developed a single measure to assess the core symptoms of depression and anxiety while maximizing discriminant validity between these constructs. Using an empirically driven iterative process, they identified a third factor, which they labeled stress.

Their research resulted in the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS), which consists of 42 items comprising three scales of 14 items. Items refer to the past week; and scores range from 0, “Did not apply to me at all,” to 4, “Applied to me very much, or most of the time.” The Depression scale measures hopelessness, low self-esteem, and low positive affect. The Anxiety scale assesses autonomic arousal, physiological hyperarousal, and the subjective feeling of fear.

The Stress scale items measure tension, agitation, and negative affect. The scales are considered to approximate facets of diagnostic categories, as follows: Depression scale for mood disorders, Anxiety scale for panic disorder, and Stress scale for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD; ). With the exception of GAD and obsessive-compulsive disorder, the anxiety scale also corresponds reasonably closely to the symptomatology of other anxiety disorders. Subsequent research established a 21-item version of the DASS (DASS-21) with seven items per scale. Numerous studies have found favorable psychometric properties of the DASS in adults with anxiety and/or mood disorders (;, ), Spanish-speaking patients , and community-dwelling adults.

All studies have demonstrated excellent internal consistency of the DASS scales in both the 42- and 21-item (DASS-21) versions: Depression (range=.91 to.97); Anxiety (range=.81 to.92); and Stress (range=.88 to.95). A three-factor solution reflecting the three scales has been found consistently across samples and factor-analytic techniques with only minor variations. Inter-scale correlations range as follows: Depression – Anxiety (.45 –.71;.50 or below in all English-speaking samples (;; ), Anxiety – Stress (.65 –.73), and Depression – Stress (.57 –.79). Older Adults Despite encouraging psychometric data with the DASS in younger adults, the measure remains untested in older adults. Given the high prevalence of anxiety, depression, and comorbid anxiety-depression in older adults and the need for briefer instruments that efficiently evaluate these symptoms in older patients, the DASS may be a particularly useful measure in this population. GAD is the most prevalent of the pervasive anxiety disorders in later life in both community and primary care samples (;;; ) but probably one of the most difficult to diagnose. Depression is also highly prevalent in older adults and frequently co-occurs with GAD.

Differentiating GAD and depression is particularly difficult in older adults given that the relationship between depression and anxiety is further obfuscated by loss of function and increased somatic presentation (; ). Some researchers refer to this state as “depletion” as opposed to pure “depression”.

A better understanding of these issues is clearly needed in the assessment of older adults. With respect to the DASS, the Anxiety scale contains some somatic items that could be experienced by older adults for reasons unrelated to emotion (e.g., breathing difficulty in the absence of exertion). In contrast, the DASS-D does not contain somatic items, thus limiting the likelihood of artificial score inflation observed in other measures of depression. Given these considerations of developmental changes, psychometric results from younger adults cannot automatically be generalized to the measurement of anxiety and depression in later life. For this population, a measure that efficiently assesses and differentiates anxiety and depression would be most useful, given the need to reduce patient burden.

Furthermore, older adults usually present to primary care settings, where few resources are available to support intensive, clinician-administered differential diagnostic procedures. As such, the DASS may be particularly useful for older adults, although its psychometric properties need to be examined in this population. Purpose and Hypotheses This study examined the psychometric properties of the DASS-21 in a population of older adults seeking help for worry in a primary care setting. Investigation of the psychometric properties included factor structure, internal consistency, and convergent and discriminative validity. We hypothesized that: a) a three-factor solution would better fit the data than other solutions; b) the DASS would demonstrate good internal consistency across all scales; c) the DASS would demonstrate good convergent validity in this sample; d) the DASS scales would differentiate different diagnostic groups; and e) the DASS scales would predict the presence vs. Absence of GAD and mood disorders as well as other symptom-specific scales. Participants Participants were 222 primary care patients 60 years of age or older referred for evaluation in the context of an ongoing randomized clinical trial of cognitive behavioral therapy for late-life worry and GAD in Houston, Texas.

Potential participants were identified via primary care physician referrals, advertisements/educational brochures in primary care clinics, and/or letters sent to random samples of clinic patients 60 years or older. Of 968 primary care patients referred to the study, 858 were contacted; and 381 signed consent to participate after an in-person meeting. Of those participants who signed consent, 68 individuals voluntarily withdrew from the study before the in-person diagnostic session; 58 withdrew after the in-person diagnostic, but before the follow-up telephone assessment; and 33 patients were excluded due to low MMSE (n=23), substance abuse (n=9), and bipolar disorder (n=1).

Patients were screened for anxiety using two GAD screening questions from the Patient Questionnaire portion of the Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders (“During the past month, have you often been bothered by “nerves” or feeling anxious or on edge?” and “During the past month, have you often been bothered by worrying about a lot of different things?”). Those who screened positive were further evaluated with the Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE; ) and the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnosis (SCID; ). The SCID was used to diagnose DSM-IV-TR Axis I disorders. Diagnoses were assigned when overall severity was rated 4 or higher on a 0-to-8 scale. The SCID has been used in numerous studies of older adults (e.g., ), and comparable psychometric properties for younger adults have been established. SCID interviews were conducted by psychology staff, advanced graduate students, predoctoral psychology interns, or postdoctoral fellows, all of whom received extensive training with the instrument before engaging in study-related assessments.

Twenty-five percent of diagnostic interviews were reviewed by a second clinician or project investigator to estimate reliability of diagnostic categories. Diagnostic reliability estimates (kappa coefficient) were good: GAD=.64; depression (including MDD, dysthmia, and not otherwise specified NOS)=.75; and anxiety diagnoses other than GAD=.73). Individuals were excluded from the study because of (a) cognitive impairment (defined as MMSE. Procedure Approximately 3 weeks following diagnostic assessment ( M=23.19 days, SD=15.29), the self-report questionnaires were administered as part of a larger assessment battery by an independent evaluator who had no other contact with study participants. All assessments were administered over the telephone.

Participants were provided with blank copies of the self-report measures with which to follow along during the telephone assessment and received a $20 gift card upon completion. Data from an overlapping sample suggest comparable psychometric properties for telephone-administered and in-person instruments. Measures To examine convergent validity of the DASS, we used self-report measures of constructs believed to parallel the three scales: anxiety (BAI), depression (BDI-II), and worry (Penn State Worry Questionnaire PSWQ). The Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) and the Quality of Life Inventory (QOLI) provided a test of convergent validity for general distress, as captured by the DASS-21 total score. Discriminative validity was examined using diagnoses obtained via standardized interviews. Anxiety The BAI is a 21-item, self-report measure of anxiety severity experienced over the previous week. Respondents report their symptoms based on a 4-point Likert-type scale.

Factor analyses fairly consistently suggest the existence of somatic and subjective/cognitive factors in older adults (;; ). Internal consistency is adequate in community-dwelling older adults (; alpha=.89), older psychiatric patients (; alpha=.90), and older medical patients (;; alpha=.86 to.92). The BAI demonstrated good convergent validity in older adults with GAD, but, consistent with most measures of anxiety and depression, had poor discriminate validity. Depression The BDI-II , a widely used self-report scale to assess depressive symptoms, consists of 21 items, each of which is rated on a 4-point scale. One week test-retest reliability for the BDI-II is 0.93, and internal consistency was 0.92 among younger adult outpatients. Although considerable evidence exists for reliability and validity of the BDI-II in younger adults and for the original BDI in older adults, only one study specifically examined the psychometric properties of the BDI-II. In a sample of depressed geriatric inpatients, Steer et al.

Reported internal consistency of α=.89 and a two-factor structure consisting of cognitive and noncognitive items. Despite the paucity of psychometric research on the BDI-II in older adults, it has been widely used for research in this population and demonstrated its clinical utility with respect to its sensitivity to treatment change. Worry The PSWQ is a 16-item, self-report scale that assesses tendency to worry independent of worry content. Each item is rated on a 1-to-5-point Likert-type scale. The internal consistency of the PSWQ has been excellent in populations of college students (α=.90;; α=.93; ), and patients with anxiety disorders (α=.93; ), and good in populations of older adults (α=.83 to.85) (; ). Among older adults, the PSWQ demonstrated adequate convergent validity in patients with and without GAD (; ) and unlike with younger adults, correlated weakly with the BDI.

Affect The PANAS , a 20-item self-report instrument, was designed to measure two separate dimensions of mood using items rated on a 1- to-5-point Likert-type scale. Positive affect is defined as the degree to which an individual is enthusiastic, active, and alert. In contrast, negative affect measures the degree to which an individual experiences subjective distress and aversive feelings. When administered with instructions to recall the previous week, as in the current study, internal consistency (α) was.87 for both the positive affect scale (PA) and negative affect scale (NA). Among depressed and anxious patients, the PANAS demonstrated good discriminative and predictive validity. Among older adults, support has been found for the original two-factor structure (; ), a revised two-factor structure , and a three-factor structure dividing negative affect into two factors.

Functional Status The QOLI (, ) is a 16-item, empirically derived, self-report measure that provides a global measure of life satisfaction based on the average of satisfaction ratings across a range of life functions. Each rating is weighted according to importance of that life area assigned by the participant.

Only dimensions of life function with nonzero importance ratings are included in the total score. The scale probes satisfaction with a wide array of life functions, only one of which involves work.

As such, the QOLI is particularly relevant to assess life satisfaction in older adults who may be retired. Internal consistency (α) was.86 in an inpatient population and.83 in a counseling center population.

Convergent and divergent validity was demonstrated in clinical and nonclinical populations. Discriminant validity of the QOLI was also demonstrated in a sample of older adults. Data Analysis Using the total sample ( n=222), we used confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to test whether DASS factor structures reported in previous studies adequately fit data collected from older adults.

A small Monte Carlo study was conducted to evaluate the power and precision of the derived CFA parameters. Parameter and standard error biases did not exceed 2.5% for any parameter and coverage rates were above 93% in all stimulated scenarios, thus indicating that the sample size of n=222 was sufficient to obtain power of 0.8.

Internal consistency was calculated applying the approach for uncorrelated errors in which the reliability coefficient is calculated using the factor loadings and error variances estimated in the CFA (Raykov, 1989). This method results in reliable estimates of internal consistency when the tau-equivalence assumption (i.e., all items of a factor load equally) is violated as in this sample. To examine convergent validity, patterns of correlations were examined between the DASS and instruments known to measure related constructs, again using the total sample ( n=222).

Differences between correlations within a sample (i.e., correlated correlations) were tested using the Fisher z transformation. To test the discriminative validity of the DASS scales with respect to differentiation between diagnostic categories, a subsample of patients ( n=200) was assigned to four mutually exclusive diagnostic groups: GAD ( n=73), mood disorder (MDD, dysthymia, or depressive disorder NOS) ( n=33), comorbid GAD and mood disorder ( n=61), and no diagnosis ( n=33). The other 22 individuals were not diagnosed with GAD or mood disorder but did have another diagnosis. Consistent with previous research comorbid diagnoses other than GAD and mood disorders were not accounted for to promote the external validity of the findings. Group differences across DASS scales were tested within the CFA framework. Binary diagnostic group variables were regressed onto the DASS factors such that the β slope quantified the difference in the strength of association between the latent factor and diagnostic groups.

A priori hypotheses for each scale were as follows. With respect to the DASS-D, we predicted that patients with a mood disorder would score higher than those without. Because the DASS-A assesses imminent fear and autonomic arousal, patients with panic disorder often score highest on this scale , Given that the present sample of older adults did not contain enough participants with panic disorder to constitute a separate diagnostic category, we predicted that all three psychiatric diagnostic categories would score significantly higher than the nonpsychiatric group. Finally, because the DASS-S assesses tension, we also predicted that the GAD and comorbid GAD/mood diagnostic groups would be significantly different from the mood and no diagnosis groups. We also examined the diagnostic utility with respect to statistical prediction of diagnostic categories. Specifically, two sets of receiver operating curve (ROC) analyses were used to establish the ability of the DASS to identify patients with a diagnosis of GAD and mood disorders (MDD, dysthymia). ROC analyses allowed comparisons of the psychometric utility between scales and other measures, as well as the establishment of cut-off scores for identifying diagnostic groups.

Cuf-off scores were estimated using the Youden-Index (i.e., maximum of equally weighted sensitivity and specificity). Differences between two or more ROC curves were conducted for correlated diagnostic tests within the same sample using STATA 9.2 (; ). For the first set of ROC analyses, patients were grouped into those with a diagnosis of GAD ( n=134) and those without and those with a mood- disorder diagnosis (either MDD or dysthymia) ( n=94) and those without. Sample Characteristics and Descriptive Statistics of Measures Sample characteristics, means, and standard deviations for all measures used in this study are depicted in. Consistent with convention, all DASS-21 raw scores were doubled to facilitate comparison with previous research and norms established using the DASS-42.

Principal diagnoses were GAD ( n=134, 60.4%), MDD ( n=24, 10.8%), social phobia ( n=5, 2.3%), anxiety NOS ( n=5, 2.3%), adjustment disorder ( n=4, 1.8%), pain disorder ( n=4, 1.8%), panic/agoraphobia ( n=3, 1.4%), dysthymia ( n=2, 0.9%), post-traumatic stress disorder ( n=2, 0.9%), depression NOS ( n=3, 1.4%), somatization disorder ( n=1, 0.5%), specific phobia ( n=2, 0.9%), and no diagnosis ( n=33, 14.9%). Convergent Validity Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated between the DASS and other measures used in this study (See ). As expected, significant positive correlations emerged for DASS-21 total scores with measures assumed to represent similar constructs (BAI, BDI, PSWQ, and PANAS-N) and significant negative correlations with measures assumed to represent dissimilar constructs (PANAS-P and QOLI). At the scale level, significant correlations were observed in the predicted direction with all other instruments for the DASS-D, DASS-S, and DASS-A ( p. Correlations Between DASS-21 and Other Measures DASS scales correlated highest with measures of like constructs and lowest with measures of unlike constructs. For instance, the DASS-D was more positively correlated with the BDI-II ( r=.76) than with any other measure: BAI ( r=.51, z=5.73, p.

Discriminative Validity Participants with a mood disorder scored significantly higher on the DASS-D relative to other diagnostic groups (see ). Both depressive groups scored significantly higher than the GAD-only group (Mood Disorder Alone: β=.69, p. Comparisons of Diagnostic Groups on the DASS Our prediction that all three diagnostic categories would score significantly higher on the DASS-A than the nonpsychiatric group was supported: GAD (β=.51, p. Diagnostic Utility Given that results from the CFAs suggested that the DASS does not represent a unitary construct, ROC analyses were conducted for each diagnostic group using the DASS scales. The first ROC analysis evaluated the ability of the DASS to identify GAD. The area under the curve (AUC), a statistic that varies between.5 (chance classification) and 1.0 (perfect diagnostic accuracy), for the three scales, was: (a) DASS-D, A z=.63, p.05 for all), suggesting that the DASS-S predicts the diagnostic presence of GAD as well as the PSWQ or PANAS-NA.

The PSWQ did obtain higher AUC values in an earlier analysis with a subset of the sample included here, however. Diagnostic- accuracy calculations with respect to GAD are listed for the DASS-S in ≥. Based on these calculations, a raw DASS-S scale score ≥ 14 represents the optimal cutoff score to best balance specificity and sensitivity when attempting to classify older adults in a primary care setting into diagnostic categories of GAD vs. Diagnostic Accuracy Values for the DASS-S When Predicting GAD The second set of ROC analyses evaluated the ability of the DASS to identify mood disorders (MDD and dysthymia). The AUC for the three scales was (a) DASS-D, A z=.77, p 05.

This suggests that the DASS-D and BDI-II are equally able to predict the diagnostic presence of depression. Diagnostic-accuracy calculations for the DASS-D are displayed in. Based on these calculations, a raw DASS-D score ≥ 6 represents the optimal cutoff score derived to maximize sensitivity and specificity when attempting to classify older adults in a primary care setting into diagnostic categories of mood vs. Non-mood categories. Higher cut scores on the DASS-D may be needed, however, depending on the purpose of the assessment and consequences of false-positives vs.

Dass Manual 2nd Edition

Discussion This study is the first to investigate the psychometric properties of the DASS-21 in older adults. Analyses examined the factor structure, internal consistency, convergent and discriminative validity, and diagnostic utility of the DASS-21.

CFA of the DASS-21 indicated that a-three factor solution best fit the data. This is consistent with findings from populations of adult anxiety-disordered patients , adult Spanish patients , and adult mood-disordered patients. Consistent with research on the DASS-42 , the three-factor solution of the DASS-21 was superior to a two-factor solution that collapsed the Anxiety and Stress scales.

The three-factor solution also produced a better fit than the two-factor solutions that collapsed the Anxiety and Depression or Stress and Depression scales. This result is in contrast to suggestions that GAD and depression are not independent constructs in older adults (, ). This suggests that a constructural distinction between depression and anxiety/stress is necessary in this sample of older adults with predominately GAD and depression. Thus, despite significant zero-order inter-scale correlations, the present results suggest the presence of three distinct factors in older adult primary care patients.

Consistent with examinations in younger adults, the DASS-21 total score demonstrated excellent internal consistency. At the scale level, the DASS-D and DASS-S had good internal consistency; whereas the DASS-A had poor internal consistency. Although a previous investigation of the DASS-21 also reported the lowest scale internal consistency for the DASS-A (α=.87) , the lower-than-expected value in this population may represent chance or a systematic difference between younger and older adults with respect to these items. Older patients present with more somatic complaints which may result in less variability in their responses than younger patients.

Indeed, post-hoc exploratory factor analyses of the DASS-21 in this sample revealed that the 7 items of the DASS-A loaded onto two separate factors. Unfortunately the loadings were inconsistent across subsequent sample divisions and rotations. Regardless, caution in the interpretation of the DASS-A – and other measures of anxiety that utilize items with somatic content – is necessary in older patients, unless such effects can be ruled out. Future studies are clearly needed to examine this hypothesis. Results strongly supported the convergent validity of the DASS-21 in older adults. The pattern of correlations between the DASS-21 total score and scale scores with associated measures was consistent with a priori predictions.

Correlations between DASS scales and measures of similar constructs (i.e., BDI, BAI, and PSWQ/PANAS-NA) were consistently significantly related and nearly unanimously superior to comparison measures. Results also provide qualified evidence for the discriminative validity of the DASS-21 in older adults. The three DASS-21 scales were tested for their ability to detect group mean differences between participants diagnosed with primary GAD, mood disorders, comorbid GAD/mood disorders, and no diagnosis.

Participants diagnosed with GAD, mood, and comorbid GAD/mood scored significantly higher on each of the scales than participants without a DSM-IV diagnosis. Further, scores on the DASS-D were higher for both the pure and comorbid depression groups than the pure GAD group. Likewise, scores on the DASS-S were higher in the comorbid GAD/mood group than in the pure mood group. In contrast, no significant differences emerged across the three diagnostic groups on the DASS-A. It should be noted, however, that the patterns of means were consistent with all a priori hypotheses and may reflect Type II error.

In summary, it appears as if all three DASS-21 scales are able to differentiate pathological and nonpathological samples. Moreover, the DASS-D appears to be especially adept at differentiating patients with and without depression even in the presence of comorbidity. The DASS-S, in contrast, seemed to differentiate the comorbid group from the mood only group.

The performance of the DASS-A should be interpreted with caution due to characteristics of the current sample. Using ROC analyses, we examined the diagnostic utility of the DASS-21 scales with respect to the prediction of GAD and mood disorders.

These analyses indicated that the DASS-S differentiates positive versus negative GAD status equally as well as the PSWQ and PANAS-NA. Analyses also indicated that the DASS-D scale better differentiates positive versus negative mood status than the other two scales and equally as well as the BDI-II.

Overall the AUC was relatively low for both scales, and especially so for the DASS-S. In comparison, the 14-item Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) demonstrated a larger AUC (.80) when predicting GAD in geriatric primary care patients. Nevertheless, these results are noteworthy in that the 7 item scales of the DASS-21 predict the diagnostic status of GAD and mood disorders equally as well as two separate measures (e.g., PSWQ=16 items and BDI-II=21 items) and therefore have the potential to reduce patient fatigue. Although short forms of the BDI and BAI exist (e.g.,; ), most researchers use the full scales. The relative advantages of using the DASS-21 or the HADS are related to the additional information yielded by the three integrated scales of the DASS. If further research using different samples replicates these findings and extends the results to the DASS-A scale, the DASS-21 is one candidate for an economical screening questionnaire in older adults.

Dass Manual (2nd Edition)

Several limitations must be considered when interpreting these results. First, all instruments examined in this study are self-report measures and are subject to similar sources of method error. Future studies using a multi-trait, multi-method approach might reveal different sources of variance and suggest whether the observed weaknesses in group-level discriminative validity result from construct definition, rater source, or both. A second limitation surrounds the relatively homogeneous diagnostic constellation of this convenience sample.

Whereas the sample reflects both the goals of the overarching treatment study and the prevalence of mental disorders in older adults, a greater sampling of other anxiety diagnoses is needed to fully explore the psychometric properties in older adults and allow comparison with younger adults. Likewise, participants were self-referred and screened positive to the two PRIME-MD questions. It is possible that some of the results would have been stronger in the larger population of standard clinical care patients who did not answer positive to screening questions Further, the recommended cut-off scores are dependent on diagnostic aims and may need to be lowered in clinical care where a false-negative has worse consequences than a false-positive. Finally, the cross-sectional nature of these data does not allow interpretation of psychometric stability over time. Longitudinal designs across the life-span and following therapy are encouraged in future studies. In conclusion, the DASS-21 demonstrated positive psychometric properties in a population of older primary care patients. Results indicate that the DASS-21 has overall good-to-excellent internal consistency, a three-factor structure consistent with younger samples, very good convergent validity, and acceptable discriminative validity – especially with respect the depression scale.

The difficulties surrounding group- level discriminative validity are common to all measures of anxiety and depression and, based on inter-scale correlations, the DASS-21 may be better than most. These results indicate that the DASS-21 should be further examined and potentially used as a routine screening device in older adults in primary care settings. This research was supported by Grant 53932 from the National Institute of Mental Health to the last author. The NIMH had no further role in study design, data collection, data analysis, interpretation, writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to submit the paper for publication.

None of the authors have conflicts of interest. Portions of this work were presented at the 2006 convention for the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies, November, Chicago. The authors wish to express their appreciation to Paula Wagner, Jessica Calleo, Antje Dietel, and Sonora Hudson for their help in preparing this manuscript and to the reviewers for their helpful comments.

Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final citable form.

Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. 1Information on demographics and reasons for refusal was not collected from patients who refused to participate 2A full correlation matrix of all measures used in this study is available upon request.