Discrepancies between physician's perception of depression in HIV patients and self-reported CES-D-20 assessment: The DHIVA study

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Abstract

Depression in HIV/AIDS patients affects adherence and disease progression and often goes unnoticed. DHIVA is a cross-sectional epidemiologic survey, investigating the prevalence of depression in people living with HIV through use of a validated self-administered scale (CES-D-20), as well and the degree of concordance between the physician's perception and patients' reports. A total of 690 HIV-infected patients attending 24 centers across Italy were enrolled. Concordance was calculated by K statistics. Association between depression and subject characteristics were evaluated through univariate and multivariate logistic models (OR and 95%CI). The prevalence of depressive symptoms was 48.8% from patient's questionnaires and 49.5% from physicians' reports, with a low/fair concordance (K =.38, p

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Marando, F., Gualberti, G., Costanzo, A. M., Di Luzio Paparatti, U., Franzetti, M., Ammassari, A., … Galli, M. (2016). Discrepancies between physician’s perception of depression in HIV patients and self-reported CES-D-20 assessment: The DHIVA study. AIDS Care - Psychological and Socio-Medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV, 28(2), 147–159. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2015.1080794

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