Author:
PETERS L.,CLARK D.,CARROLL F.
Abstract
Background. The equivalency of the Composite International
Diagnostic Interview delivered by
human interviewers (CIDI) and its computerized version (CIDI-Auto) was
examined for anxiety
and depressive disorders.Methods. Subjects were 40 patients at an Anxiety Disorders
Clinic
and 40 general medical practice
attenders. The CIDI-Auto and CIDI were administered in counterbalanced
order on the same day
and measures of computer attitudes and the acceptability of the two interview
formats were also
taken.Results. The CIDI-Auto and the CIDI were found to be
equally acceptable to subjects on the
dimensions of comfort and preference, while the CIDI-Auto was
rated as less embarrassing but too
long in comparison with the CIDI. The agreement between the two formats
was acceptable with
kappa values for ICD-10 diagnoses being above 0·65 and for
DSM-III-R diagnoses above 0·5 except
for two diagnoses (generalized anxiety disorder and dysthymia). Discrepancies
between the two
formats were predicted by computer attitudes and not by computer experiences
or the tendency to
respond in a socially desirable fashion.Conclusions. It is concluded that the CIDI-Auto in its
self-administered form is an acceptable
substitute for the CIDI for suitable subjects.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
75 articles.
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