| Literature DB >> 28211594 |
Luise Lago1, Meyer D Glantz2, Ronald C Kessler3, Nancy A Sampson3, Ali Al-Hamzawi4, Silvia Florescu5, Jacek Moskalewicz6, Sam Murphy7, Fernando Navarro-Mateu8, Yolanda Torres de Galvis9, Maria Carmen Viana10, Miguel Xavier11, Louisa Degenhardt1.
Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative uses the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). The first 13 surveys only assessed substance dependence among respondents with a history of substance abuse; later surveys also assessed substance dependence without symptoms of abuse. We compared results across the two sets of surveys to assess implications of the revised logic and develop an imputation model for missing values of lifetime dependence in the earlier surveys. Lifetime dependence without symptoms of abuse was low in the second set of surveys (0.3% alcohol, 0.2% drugs). Regression-based imputation models were built in random half-samples of the new surveys and validated in the other half. There were minimal differences for imputed and actual reported cases in the validation dataset for age, gender and quantity; more mental disorders and days out of role were found in the imputed cases. Concordance between imputed and observed dependence cases in the full sample was high for alcohol [sensitivity 88.0%, specificity 99.8%, total classification accuracy (TCA) 99.5%, area under the curve (AUC) 0.94] and drug dependence (sensitivity 100.0%, specificity 99.8%, TCA 99.8%, AUC 1.00). This provides cross-national evidence of the small degree to which lifetime dependence occurs without symptoms of abuse. Imputation of substance dependence in the earlier WMH surveys improved estimates of dependence.Entities:
Keywords: DSM-IV alcohol abuse; DSM-IV alcohol dependence; World Mental Health Survey; imputation; substance use disorder
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28211594 PMCID: PMC5664943 DOI: 10.1002/mpr.1557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Methods Psychiatr Res ISSN: 1049-8931 Impact factor: 4.035