Authors
CL Vandeleur, S Rothen, Y Lustenberger, J Glaus, E Castelao, M Preisig
Publication date
2015/1/15
Journal
Journal of affective disorders
Volume
171
Pages
120-127
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Background
The use of the family history method is recommended in family studies as a type of proxy interview of non-participating relatives. However, using different sources of information can result in bias as direct interviews may provide a higher likelihood of assigning diagnoses than family history reports. The aims of the present study were to: 1) compare diagnoses for threshold and subthreshold mood syndromes from interviews to those relying on information from relatives; 2) test the appropriateness of lowering the diagnostic threshold and combining multiple reports from the family history method to obtain comparable prevalence estimates to the interviews; 3) identify factors that influence the likelihood of agreement and reporting of disorders by informants.
Methods
Within a family study, 1621 informant–index subject pairs were identified. DSM-5 diagnoses from direct interviews of index subjects were …
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