AI Article Synopsis

  • This study focuses on how individual symptoms of depression and co-occurring issues like anxiety and eating disorders (ED) can change over time for people with moderate to severe depression.
  • Participants tracked their symptoms using ecological momentary assessment (EMA), providing a total of 2480 observations over 20 days.
  • The findings suggest that eating disorder symptoms play a significant role in individual symptom networks, potentially influencing the persistence of depressive symptoms, and highlight the need for further research on how these networks can improve clinical decision-making.

Article Abstract

This study uses time-intensive, item-level assessment to examine individual depressive and co-occurring symptom dynamics. Participants experiencing moderate-severe depression (N = 31) completed ecological momentary assessment (EMA) four times per day for 20 days (total observations = 2480). We estimated idiographic networks using MDD, anxiety, and ED items. ED items were most frequently included in individual networks relative to depression and anxiety items. We built ridge and logistic regression ensembles to explore how idiographic network centrality metrics performed at predicting between-subject depression outcomes (PHQ-9 change score and clinical deterioration, respectively) at 6-months follow-up. For predicting PHQ-9 change score, R ranged between 0.13 and 0.28. Models predicting clinical deterioration ranged from no better than chance to 80 % accuracy. This pilot study shows how co-occurring anxiety and ED symptoms may contribute to the maintenance of depressive symptoms. Future work should assess the predictive utility of psychological networks to develop understanding of how idiographic models may inform clinical decisions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.04.034DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

idiographic models
8
depression outcomes
8
anxiety items
8
phq-9 change
8
change score
8
clinical deterioration
8
depression
5
understanding heterogeneity
4
heterogeneity comorbidity
4
comorbidity variability
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!