Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Primary |
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) |
Range 0-126. Higher scores mean worse outcome. This psychometric scale measures the global psychopathology investigating several psychopathological areas (anxiety, thinking, mood, perception, etc.). It provides a global score of severity (> 31 means that the patient need hospitalization). |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Primary |
Clinical Global Impression (CGI) Severity Subscale |
Range 0-7. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The severity subscale measures the global severity of symptom presentation based on the clinicians' evaluation (Normal, Borderline mentally ill, Mildly ill, etc.). |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Primary |
Clinical Global Impression (CGI) Improvement Subscale |
Range 0-7. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The improvement subscale measures the clinical improvement (how much has the patient changed) according to the clinician's judgement. It results as: very much improved, much improved, minimally improved, no changed, minimally worse, etc.). |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Primary |
Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAM-A) |
Range 0-56. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale consists of 14 items, each defined by a series of symptoms, and measures both psychic anxiety (mental agitation and psychological distress) and somatic anxiety (physical complaints related to anxiety). |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Primary |
Impact of Event Scale - Revised Version (IES-R) |
Range 0-88. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale is a self-report measure of current subjective distress in response to a specific traumatic event. It comprises 3 subscales representative of the major symptom clusters of post-traumatic stress: intrusion, avoidance, and hyper-arousal. |
2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Secondary |
Disability Scale (DISS) |
Range 0-30. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale includes 3 self-rated items designed to measure the extent to which 3 major domains (work 0-10, social life/leisure activities 0-10, and family life/home responsibilities 0-10) in the patient's life are functionally impaired by psychiatric or medical symptoms. For each subscale, higher scores mean better outcome. Subscales are summed to compute a total score. |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Secondary |
Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D) |
Range 0-67. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale measures the severity of depressive symptoms taking into account anxiety and somatic manifestations. |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Secondary |
Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) |
Range 0-60. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale measures the core symptoms of depression (e.g. anhedonia). |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Secondary |
Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) |
Range 0-56. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale has 11 items and is based on the patient's subjective report of his or her clinical condition, and generally limited to the previous 48 hours. There are four items that are graded on a 0 to 8 scale (irritability, speech, thought content, and disruptive/aggressive behavior), while the remaining seven items are graded on a 0 to 4 scale. |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Secondary |
Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) |
Range 0-40. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale is a semi-structured interview that consists of 10 core items, 5 measuring time, interference, distress, resistance and control of obsessions (items: 1-5), and 5 identical items measuring compulsions (items: 6-10). The items are rated from 0 (no symptoms) to 4 (severe symptoms), and yield a global severity score (range 0-40). |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
|
Secondary |
Positive And Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) |
Range 30-210. Higher scores mean worse outcome. The scale is a medical scale used for measuring symptom severity of patients with schizophrenia. It assesses positive symptoms, which refer to an excess or distortion of normal functions (e.g., hallucinations and delusions), and negative symptoms, which represent a diminution or loss of normal functions. The patient is rated from 1 to 7 on 30 different symptoms based on the interview as well as reports of family members or primary care hospital workers. |
2 months at the start of outbreak (T0), 2 months of lockdown period (T1) and 2 months of reopening phase (T2) |
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