Keyword search (3,448 papers available) |
Author(s): Rice DB; Kloda LA; Levis B; Qi B; Kingsland E; Thombs BD;
Objective: Database searches for studies of diagnostic test accuracy are notoriously difficult to filter, highly resource-intensive, and a potential barrier to quality evidence synthesis. We examined published meta-analyses of depression screening tool accu...
Article GUID: 27411746
Author(s): Delisle VC; Gumuchian ST; Kloda LA; Boruff J; El-Baalbaki G; Körner A; Malcarne VL; Thombs BD;...
Objective: Peer facilitators play an important role in determining the success of many support groups for patients with medical illnesses. However, many facilitators do not receive...
Article GUID: 27856483
Author(s): Rice DB; Kloda LA; Shrier I; Thombs BD;
Objective: Concerns have been raised regarding the quality and completeness of abstract reporting in evidence reviews, but this had not been evaluated in meta-analyses of diagnostic accuracy. Our objective was to evaluate reporting quality and completeness ...
Article GUID: 27864250
Author(s): Roseman M; Saadat N; Riehm KE; Kloda LA; Boruff J; Ickowicz A; Baltzer F; Katz LY; Patten SB; Rousseau C; Thombs BD;...
Objective: Depression screening among children and adolescents is controversial. In 2009, the United States Preventive Services Task Force first recommended routine depression screening for adolesc...
Article GUID: 28851234
Author(s): Pourali M; Townsend C; Kross A; Guindon A; Jaeger JAG;
The dataset presented here provides the degree of urban sprawl across 33 Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs) in Canada of 2011 together with the 469 Census Subdivisions (CSDs) located within the 2011 boundaries of the CMAs, for the years 1991, 2001, and 2011. ...
Article GUID: 35242923
Author(s): Thombs BD; Levis B; Lyubenova A; Neupane D; Negeri Z; Wu Y; Sun Y; He C; Krishnan A; Vigod SN; Bhandari PM; Imran M; Rice DB; Azar M; Chiovi...
Objective: The Maternal Mental Health in Canada, 2018/2019, survey reported that 18% of 7,085 mothers who recently gave birth reported "feelings consistent with postpartum depression" based on scor...
Article GUID: 33104415
Author(s): Wu Y; Levis B; Ioannidis JPA; Benedetti A; Thombs BD;
Introduction: Three previous individual participant data meta-analyses (IPDMAs) reported that, compared to the Structured Clinical Interview for the DSM (SCID), alternative reference standards, primarily the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CID...
Article GUID: 32814337
Author(s): Kloda LA, Boruff JT, Cavalcante AS
J Med Libr Assoc. 2020 Apr;108(2):185-194 Authors: Kloda LA, Boruff JT, Cavalcante AS
Article GUID: 32256230
Author(s): Levis B; Benedetti A; Ioannidis JPA; Sun Y; Negeri Z; He C; Wu Y; Krishnan A; Bhandari PM; Neupane D; Imran M; Rice DB; Riehm KE; Saadat N; ...
Objectives: Depression symptom questionnaires are not for diagnostic classification. Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores =10 are nonetheless often used to estimate depression prevalence. ...
Article GUID: 32105798
Author(s): Wu Y; Levis B; Sun Y; Krishnan A; He C; Riehm KE; Rice DB; Azar M; Yan XW; Neupane D; Bhandari PM; Imran M; Chiovitti MJ; Saadat N; Boruff J...
Objective: Two previous individual participant data meta-analyses (IPDMAs) found that different diagnostic interviews classify different proportions of people as having major depression overall or ...
Article GUID: 31911325
Author(s): Thombs BD; Levis AW; Azar M; Saadat N; Riehm KE; Sanchez TA; Chiovitti MJ; Rice DB; Levis B; Fedoruk C; Lyubenova A; Malo Vázquez de Lara AL...
Objectives: We evaluated whether sample sizes in different arms of two-arm parallel group randomized controlled trials of nonregulated interventions were systematically closer in size than would pl...
Article GUID: 31866472
Author(s): Levis B; McMillan D; Sun Y; He C; Rice DB; Krishnan A; Wu Y; Azar M; Sanchez TA; Chiovitti MJ; Bhandari PM; Neupane D; Saadat N; Riehm KE; I...
Objectives: A previous individual participant data meta-analysis (IPDMA) identified differences in major depression classification rates between different diagnostic interviews, controlling for dep...
Article GUID: 31568624
Author(s): Wu Y; Levis B; Riehm KE; Saadat N; Levis AW; Azar M; Rice DB; Boruff J; Cuijpers P; Gilbody S; Ioannidis JPA; Kloda LA; McMillan D; Patten S...
Background: Item 9 of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) queries about thoughts of death and self-harm, but not suicidality. Although it is sometimes used to assess suicide risk, most posit...
Article GUID: 31298180
Author(s): Thombs BD, Benedetti A, Kloda LA, Levis B, Azar M, Riehm KE, Saadat N, Cuijpers P, Gilbody S, Ioannidis JP, McMillan D, Patten SB, Shrier I,...
BMJ Open. 2016 Apr 13;6(4):e011913 Authors: Thombs BD, Benedetti A, Kloda LA, Levis B, Azar M, Riehm KE, Saadat N, Cuijpers P, Gilbody S, Ioannidis JP, McMillan D, Patten SB, Shrier I, Steele RJ, ...
Article GUID: 27075844
Author(s): Levis B; Benedetti A; Riehm KE; Saadat N; Levis AW; Azar M; Rice DB; Chiovitti MJ; Sanchez TA; Cuijpers P; Gilbody S; Ioannidis JPA; Kloda L...
Background: Different diagnostic interviews are used as reference standards for major depression classification in research. Semi-structured interviews involve clinical judgement, whereas fully str...
Article GUID: 29717691
Author(s): Ishihara M; Harel D; Levis B; Levis AW; Riehm KE; Saadat N; Azar M; Rice DB; Sanchez TA; Chiovitti MJ; Cuijpers P; Gilbody S; Ioannidis JPA;...
Background: The objective of this study was to develop and validate a short form of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9), a self-report questionnaire for assessing depressive symptomatology, ...
Article GUID: 30238571
Author(s): Azar M; Riehm KE; Saadat N; Sanchez T; Chiovitti M; Qi L; Rice DB; Levis B; Fedoruk C; Levis AW; Kloda LA; Kimmelman J; Benedetti A; Thombs ...
Importance: Many interventions that are important to the health care of patients are not subject to regulation by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or comparable regulatory bodies in other ...
Article GUID: 30855655
Title: | Depression Screening and Health Outcomes in Children and Adolescents: A Systematic Review |
Authors: | Roseman M, Saadat N, Riehm KE, Kloda LA, Boruff J, Ickowicz A, Baltzer F, Katz LY, Patten SB, Rousseau C, Thombs BD, |
Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28851234/ |
DOI: | 10.1177/0706743717727243 |
Category: | |
PMID: | 28851234 |
Dept Affiliation: | LIBRARY
1 1 Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Ontario. 2 2 Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, Montréal, Québec. 3 3 Library, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec. 4 4 Schulich Library of Science and Engineering, McGill University, Montréal, Québec. 5 5 Department of Psychiatry, Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario. 6 6 Montréal Children's Hospital, Montréal, Québec. 7 7 Department of Pediatrics, McGill University, Montréal, Québec. 8 8 Department of Psychiatry, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg. 9 9 Departments of Psychiatry and Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta. 10 10 Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, Montréal, Québec. 11 11 Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montréal, Québec. 12 12 Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montréal, Québec. 13 13 Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology, McGill University, Montréal, Québec. 14 14 Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montréal, Québec. |
Description: |
Objective: Depression screening among children and adolescents is controversial. In 2009, the United States Preventive Services Task Force first recommended routine depression screening for adolescents, and this recommendation was reiterated in 2016. However, no randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of screening were identified in the original 2009 systematic review or in an updated review through February 2015. The objective of this systematic review was to provide a current evaluation to determine whether there is evidence from RCTs that depression screening in childhood and adolescence improves depression outcomes. Method: Data sources included the MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Cochrane CENTRAL and LILACS databases searched February 2, 2017. Eligible studies had to be RCTs that compared depression outcomes between children or adolescents aged 6 to 18 years who underwent depression screening and those who did not. Results: Of 552 unique title/abstracts, none received full-text review. No RCTs that investigated the effects of screening on depression outcomes in children or adolescents were identified. Conclusions: There is no direct RCT evidence that supports depression screening among children and adolescents. Groups that consider recommending screening should carefully consider potential harms, as well as the use of scarce health resources, that would occur with the implementation of screening programs. |