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  1. This depression inventory can be self-scored. The scoring scale is at the end of the questionnaire. 1. 0 I do not feel sad. 1 I feel sad 2 I am sad all the time and I can't snap out of it. 3 I am so sad and unhappy that I can't stand it. 2. 0 I am not particularly discouraged about the future. 1 I feel discouraged about the future.

  2. Beck Depression Inventory. Choose one statement from among the group of four statements in each question that best describes how you have been feeling during the past few days. Circle the number beside your choice. 0 I do not feel sad.

  3. BDI - II Instructions: This questionnaire consists of 21 groups of statements. Please read each group of statements carefully. And then pick out the one statement in each group that best describes the way you have been feeling during the past two weeks, including today. Circle the number beside the statement you have picked. If several ...

  4. Depression Inventory (BDI-I, BDI-IA, and BDI-II) are designed to rate the severity of respondents’ depression in the weeks preceding questionnaire completion. Suited to both clini-cal and research populations, the 21-item instru-ment evaluates a variety of cognitive and physical symptoms of depression. One question

  5. Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) is a commonly used instrument for quantifying levels of depression. The scale for the BDI was originally created by patients’ descriptions of their symptoms – mood, pessimism, sense of failure, self-dissatisfaction, guilt, suicidal ideas, crying,

  6. Construct: Depressive symptoms. Description of Measure: The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) is a 21-item, self-report rating inventory that measures characteristic attitudes and symptoms of depression (Beck, et al., 1961).

  7. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) is a 21-item self-reporting questionnaire for evaluating the severity of depression in normal and psychiatric populations [1,2]. Developed by Beck et al. in 1961, it relied on the theory of negative cognitive distortions as central to depression [3].