Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6229688 Journal of Affective Disorders 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Introducing a novel compact questionnaire called Mood Zoom (MZ) which expedites daily mood monitoring.•MZ comprises six items on a 7-point Likert scale, and easily fits a smartphone screen.•MZ correlated well against established clinical questionnaires.•MZ can differentiate bipolar disorders and borderline personality disorders.

BackgroundTraditionally, assessment of psychiatric symptoms has been relying on their retrospective report to a trained interviewer. The emergence of smartphones facilitates passive sensor-based monitoring and active real-time monitoring through time-stamped prompts; however there are few validated self-report measures designed for this purpose.MethodsWe introduce a novel, compact questionnaire, Mood Zoom (MZ), embedded in a customised smart-phone application. MZ asks participants to rate anxiety, elation, sadness, anger, irritability and energy on a 7-point Likert scale. For comparison, we used four standard clinical questionnaires administered to participants weekly to quantify mania (ASRM), depression (QIDS), anxiety (GAD-7), and quality of life (EQ-5D). We monitored 48 Bipolar Disorder (BD), 31 Borderline Personality Disorders (BPD) and 51 Healthy control (HC) participants to study longitudinal (median±iqr: 313±194 days) variation and differences of mood traits by exploring the data using diverse time-series tools.ResultsMZ correlated well (|R|>0.5,p<0.0001) with QIDS, GAD-7, and EQ-5D. We found statistically strong (|R|>0.3,p<0.0001) differences in variability in all questionnaires for the three cohorts. Compared to HC, BD and BPD participants exhibit different trends and variability, and on average had higher self-reported scores in mania, depression, and anxiety, and lower quality of life. In particular, analysis of MZ variability can differentiate BD and BPD which was not hitherto possible using the weekly questionnaires.LimitationsAll reported scores rely on self-assessment; there is a lack of ongoing clinical assessment by experts to validate the findings.ConclusionsMZ could be used for efficient, long-term, effective daily monitoring of mood instability in clinical psychiatric practice.

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