Canada ranks 5th on 'happiness' survey - World - CBC News
Source:          Case Western Reserve University
                     
Newswise — Negative thinking is a red flag for clinical  depression. Stopping such thoughts early on can save millions of people  from mental illness, according research study from the Frances Payne  Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western Reserve University.
Jaclene  Zauszniewski, the Kate Hanna Harvey Professor in Community Health  Nursing and associate dean for doctoral education at the school, has  developed a brief 8-item survey to help healthcare providers identify  depressive thinking patterns that may lead to serious depression if not  identified and addressed early.
Zauszniewski’s Depression  Cognition Scale (DCS) asks individuals to respond to questions about  helplessness, hopelessness, purposelessness, worthlessness,  powerlessness, loneliness, emptiness and meaninglessness using a scale  that ranges from “strongly agree” to “strongly disagree.”
“Clinicians  need guidelines and measures to know when negative thinking has reached  a tipping point and has begun to spiral into clinical depression,” she  said.
The DCS has been used effectively to screen for more serious  depressive symptoms in persons in the U.S. and around the world, but  the researchers wanted to take it further and determine the point at  which negative thinking establishes a pattern for the onset of clinical  depression—even without other emotional expressions or body symptoms  associated with depression.
In a study of 629 healthy adults from  42 states who responded to questions through the Internet survey, they  found the answer. Participants ranged in age from 21 to 84 years, and 70  percent were women; women make up the majority depression sufferers.  The majority of the participants were college educated and had incomes  greater than $40,000.
For this study, the researchers compared DCS  scores to the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale  (CES-D), which is recognized as a “gold standard” measure for  identifying clinically significant depressive symptoms. Their goal was  to determine a cut score on the DCS that would represent the point at  which individuals may benefit from learning ways to change negative  thinking in order to prevent serious depression.
They found that  a score of 7 on the DCS would be that point at which individuals should  begin initiating strategies to change negative thoughts into positive  ones.  The findings also showed that at this cut score, the DCS  accurately differentiated between persons with and without clinical  depressive symptoms as determined by the CES-D.
Zauszniewski and Abir K. Bekhet, a researcher from Marquette University in Milwaukee, report their findings in Issue 34 of the Western Journal of Nursing Research article, “Screening Measure for Early Detection of Depressive Symptoms:  The Depressive Cognition Scale.
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