Literature DB >> 16097396

Recalibration methods to enhance information on prevalence rates from large mental health surveys.

N A Taub1, Z Morgan, T S Brugha, P C Lambert, P E Bebbington, R Jenkins, R C Kessler, A M Zaslavsky, T Hotz.   

Abstract

Comparisons between self-report and clinical psychiatric measures have revealed considerable disagreement. It is unsafe to consider these measures as directly equivalent, so it would be valuable to have a reliable recalibration of one measure in terms of the other. We evaluated multiple imputation incorporating a Bayesian approach, and a fully Bayesian method, to recalibrate diagnoses from a self-report survey interview in terms of those from a clinical interview with data from a two-phase national household survey for a practical application, and artificial data for simulation studies. The most important factors in obtaining a precise and accurate 'clinical' prevalence estimate from self-report data were (a) good agreement between the two diagnostic measures and (b) a sufficiently large set of calibration data with diagnoses based on both kinds of interview from the same group of subjects. From the case study, calibration data on 612 subjects were sufficient to yield estimates of the total prevalence of anxiety, depression or neurosis with a precision in the region of +/-2%. The limitations of the calibration method demonstrate the need to increase agreement between survey and reference measures by improving lay interviews and their diagnostic algorithms.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16097396      PMCID: PMC6878493          DOI: 10.1002/mpr.13

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Methods Psychiatr Res        ISSN: 1049-8931            Impact factor:   4.035


  21 in total

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6.  The National Psychiatric Morbidity surveys of Great Britain--strategy and methods.

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  1 in total

1.  Using latent variable modeling and multiple imputation to calibrate rater bias in diagnosis assessment.

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  1 in total

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