Abstract Background Despite the urgency of mental health surveillance and treatment in humanitarian emergencies, there has been little evaluation of instruments that keep response burden to a minimum. We aimed… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Background Despite the urgency of mental health surveillance and treatment in humanitarian emergencies, there has been little evaluation of instruments that keep response burden to a minimum. We aimed to evaluate a sequential screening process for the detection of major depressive disorder that improves the efficiency of screening-confirmation procedures using the two-item and eight-item Patient Health Questionnaires (PHQ-2 and PHQ-8, respectively) in a refugee population. Methods We analysed data from a cross-sectional survey completed by Syrian refugees in a camp in Greece between January and February, 2017. All survey items were translated to and back-translated from Arabic. Face-to-face interviews took place in an area with audio privacy. We used logistic regression to measure the correlation between the PHQ-2 classification and the summed score of the remaining six items of the PHQ-8, and used empirical data to simulate the sequential screening process for major depressive disorder. The sequential process replicates the diagnoses captured if the PHQ-2 were used to narrow the population who would complete the full PHQ-8 assessment. First, respondents complete the PHQ-2; next, only respondents who score above a threshold are considered at risk for depression and complete the remaining six items. We compared the positive and negative percent agreement of the PHQ-2 and sequential screening process. Response burden was assessed through item and instrument completion. Findings We included data from 135 respondents, representing 40% of the adult population in the refugee camp at the time of the survey. Mean age was 30 years (range 18–61 years); 41% of respondents were women. The PHQ-2 and PHQ-8 instruments were completed by 123 (91%) and 113 (84%) respondents, respectively (p=0·014). The scores of the PHQ-2 and remaining six items of the PHQ-8 were significantly correlated (p Interpretation The sequential screening process detected 90% of people who had symptoms consistent with major depressive disorder. Concurrent validity of the PHQ-2 and PHQ-8 was shown. Our results suggest that this sequential screening approach is a useful strategy to streamline surveillance of major depressive disorder in humanitarian contexts with a scarcity of mental health specialists while simultaneously reducing the response burden. Funding None.
               
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