Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine

Search

Search

Close

Original Article
J Korean Acad Rehabil Med. 2007;31(4):434-439.
Screening Test for Depression Using the SF-36 Health Survey in Patients with Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain.
Kim, Dong Hyun , Kim, Tae Hoon , Kim, Jun Lae , Lee, Hyuck , Kim, Soo A , Oh, Ki Young
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Soonchunhyang University College of Medicine, Korea. redhot911@hanmail.net
Abstract
Objective
To evaluate the usefulness of the mental component summary (MCS) from the short form 36-item health survey (SF-36) as a screening test for depression in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain and identify the optimal cut-off value that predicts a positive depression score measured by the center for epidemiological study depression survey (CES-D). Method: This study was designed as a questionnaire survey. 502 patients who visited our outpatient clinics due to chronic musculoskeletal pain were evaluated. They completed the SF-36 and the CES-D. The correlation between the MCS score from the SF-36 and the CES-D was identified, and also the cut-off value of the MCS score was determined with ROC curves used the CES-D as the standard measure for depression. The MCS scores were compared according to age, sex, duration of diseases, diagnosis, and the presence of depression. Results: The mean overall score of CES-D and the MCS score were 17.5±10.2, 52.2±16.4 respectively. The MCS scores negatively correlated with the CES-D (γ=-0.879, p<0.01). There were no significant differences of the MCS scores in each group according to age, sex, duration of diseases, and diagnosis (p>0.05). However, patients with depression had significantly lower MCS scores than patients without depression (p<0.05). The cut-off value was 42.4 with 88.1% of sensitivity and 92.6% of specificity. Conclusion: The MCS scores would be useful screening test for depression with cut-off value of 42.4 that predicts the closest result of the CES-D. (J Korean Acad Rehab Med 2007; 31: 434-439)

Keywords :SF-36, Chronic pain, Musculoskeletal pain, Depression, CES-D

Go to Top