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Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1967

THE BECK DEPRESSION INVENTORY WITH MEDICAL INPATIENTS

John J. Schwab; Martin R. Bialow; Roy S. Clemmons; Paul Martin; Charles E. Holzer

INTRODUCTION The purpose of this investigation is to report the use of the Beck Depression Inventory, Beck (1961), in a general medical inpatient population. This study is one segment of a comprehensive evaluation of depression in medical patients. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) was used because it was clinically derived. In reporting its validity and reliability with psychiatric patients, Beck indicated that it should have value in research on depression. Although the BDI was designed to measure depression in psychiatric patients, the possibility of extending its use to the area of general medicine is appealing. Diagnosing depression in medical patients depends too much on clinicians’ subjective evaluations. The need for objective criteria is critical. In addition, the use of the instrument with different types of subjects refines its applicability. MATERIAL The BDI was developed to provide an objective instrument for assessing depression in patients by measuring their behavioral manifestations of depression. Beck and his colleagues were concerned with identifying and objectively quantifying depression, rather than distinguishing among various types of depression or diagnostic categories. The inventory contains twenty-one symptom attitude categories (see Table 6). For each, there are four to five statements of inoreasing severity. The patient reads the scale and chooses the statement which he feels is most applicable to himself at that particular time. The score on each item may range from 0-3 depending on the severity; the total score falls between 0 and 62. Cutting scores were estabIished by Beck (1963), and wiIl be presented in the section on results.


The Journal of Pastoral Care and Counseling | 1976

The Clergy as a Mental Health Resource: Parts I and II

Roger A. Bell; Robert R. Morris; Charles E. Holzer; George J. Warheit

Parts I and II of this article contain some of the results of a recent research project conducted in an area of mid-Florida. The group surveyed was predominantly parish clergy. This article gives some indication of the results of this survey as it speaks to the issue of the clergy as a mental health resource. There is a good deal of serendipity data that spin off from the central theme. The article has immediate relevance for clinical pastoral education supervisors, parish clergy, and others in the field of health care delivery.


Archives of Sexual Behavior | 1979

The intelligence of rapists: new data.

Hernan Vera; George W. Barnard; Charles E. Holzer

IQs of violent sexual offenders (rapists) were compared to those of alleged nonviolent sexual offenders, nonsexual violent offenders, and nonsexual nonviolent offenders. Data were gathered from defendants referred to the medical coauthor for pretrial psychiatric evaluation. Rapists scored lower in the IQ test, but this difference did not appear to be significant in the pairwise X2 comparisons. This held true after controlling for the race of the defendant.


International Journal of Social Psychiatry | 1968

Current Concepts of Depression: the Sociocultural

John J. Schwab; Judith M. Brown; Charles E. Holzer; Marilyn Sokolof

Our concern with the current sociocultural concepts of depression suggests that these change with time. Such a perspective requires that we look back in history, scan the present, and glimpse the future. Although widespread interest in the sociology of mental illness is a late development, it has at least two visible antecedents. As individuals, the great physicians have always understood the relevance of social influences to illness; and the public health movement of the 19th Century showed that these influences could be directed so that they benefited the state.l However, for several reasons, psychiatry’s involvement in these developments has lagged. As it attempted to justify its existence as a medical specialty. psychiatry adhered to a rigid medical model, focusing on the phenomenological aspects of psychopathology and searching for anatomical lesions. Also, the sociology of mental illness was neglected because the tools of psychoanalysis dealt with the intra-psychic, and these engaging discoveries occupied the attention of


Journal of Health and Social Behavior | 1975

Race and mental illness: an epidemiologic update.

George J. Warheit; Charles E. Holzer; Sandra A. Arey


Social Forces | 1976

Sex, Marital Status, and Mental Health: A Reappraisal

George J. Warheit; Sandra A. Arey; Charles E. Holzer; Roger A. Bell


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 1967

A comparison of two rating scales for depression

John J. Schwab; Martin R. Bialow; Charles E. Holzer


Psychosomatics | 1973

Depressive Symptomatology and Age

John J. Schwab; Charles E. Holzer; George J. Warheit


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1976

ALCOHOLISM, LIFE EVENTS, AND PSYCHIATRIC IMPAIRMENT*

Roger A. Bell; Kim A. Keeley; Ray D. Clements; George J. Warheit; Charles E. Holzer


Psychosomatics | 1966

The Affective Symptomatology Of Depression in Medical Inpatients

John J. Schwab; Martin R. Bialow; Roy S. Clemmons; Charles E. Holzer

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Roger A. Bell

University of Louisville

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Kim A. Keeley

University of Louisville

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