28-Item General Health Questionnaire: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Outcome Measures]] [[Category:Mental Health]]
[[Category:Outcome Measures]] [[Category:Mental Health]]
[[Category:Screening Tools]]

Revision as of 10:59, 3 December 2018

Objective[edit | edit source]

The General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) is a screening device for identifying minor psychiatric disorders in the general population and within community or non-psychiatric clinical settings such as primary care or general medical out-patients. Suitable for all ages from adolescent upwards (but not children), it assesses the respondent’s current state and asks if that differs from his or her usual state. It is therefore sensitive to short-term psychiatric disorders but not to long-standing attributes of the respondent.

Intended Population[edit | edit source]

The self-administered questionnaire focuses on two major areas:

  The inability to carry out normal functions
  The appearance of new and distressing phenomena.


Method of Use[edit | edit source]

The self-administered questionnaire is an ideal screening device for identifying non-psychotic and minor psychiatric disorders to help inform further intervention.

GHQ-28: a 28 item scaled version – assesses somatic symptoms, anxiety, and insomnia, social dysfunction and severe depression.

GHQ28 4/5* (max score 28)

GHQ.jpg

Reference[edit | edit source]

Michele Sterling, General Health Questionnaire 28; Journal of Physiotherapy Vol 57, 2011-59. Clinimetrics Appraisal

Evidence[edit | edit source]

Reliability GHQ 28.JPG


References[edit | edit source]