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Assessing Depression Following Injury or Illness: Preliminary Validation of the Neuropsychology.Org Measures of Anxiety and Depression (NOMAD) Scale

Introduction Evaluation is an important aspect of any evidence‐based rehabilitation program, as it helps to determine the course and scope of the prescribed therapy. Several brief, empirically validated measures of depression are available, yet these measures lack a few innovative features that are...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:PM & R 2020-06, Vol.12 (6), p.581-588
Main Authors: Jacobson, Kristin, Faris, Allison, Olson, Alexis, DeBellis, Michael, Wanlass, Richard
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Introduction Evaluation is an important aspect of any evidence‐based rehabilitation program, as it helps to determine the course and scope of the prescribed therapy. Several brief, empirically validated measures of depression are available, yet these measures lack a few innovative features that are useful when evaluating rehabilitation and other medical populations. Such features include a retrospective self‐report of premorbid psychological status, embedded symptom validity measures, and means of quickly accounting for physiological symptoms directly resulting from injury or illness that may not indicate psychological distress. Objective This was a preliminary study investigating the utility and psychometric properties, including normative data, of the Neuropsychology.Org Measures of Anxiety and Depression (NOMAD) Depression scale. This brief screening measure for rehabilitation and other medical patients provides ratings of current and preinjury/illness depression levels, and a screening for symptom magnification and minimization. Design Clinical and control participants completed the NOMAD Depression scale. Clinical participants also completed some or all of the following criterion standard measures: Beck Depression Inventory—Second Edition (BDI‐II), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), and Symptom Checklist‐90‐Revised (SCL‐90‐R). Setting University hospital–based rehabilitation psychology and neuropsychology clinic and a private neuropsychology and pain psychology practice. Participants Convenience sample of 575 adults referred for neuropsychological or psychological evaluation, along with 85 undergraduate control subjects. Main Outcome Measurements NOMAD Depression scale results were correlated with criterion standards. Diagnostic sensitivity and specificity were calculated. Results The NOMAD Depression scale demonstrated moderate convergent validity with other brief mood measures: correlation coefficients (r = .76 to .87, P 
ISSN:1934-1482
1934-1563
DOI:10.1002/pmrj.12273