The 30-item version of the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) was completed by 1649 new adult enrollees in a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO). Factor analysis of responses disclosed six factors (Anxiety/Strain, Confidence, Depression, Energy, Social Function, and Insomnia) and a strong tendency for items of similar wording (positive phrasing) to cluster together. Elevations of GHQ scores, especially when persistent over two administrations of the GHQ separated by 7 months, were strongly associated with the probability of both mental health and non-mental health care within 12 months of enrollment. Anxiety/Strain, Depression, and Social Function scores were associated with the probability of use; Confidence and Energy factors were not. Once in care a member's rate of use of service was relatively independent of the response pattern to the GHQ at enrollment. (January 1987)
Journal of Chronic Diseases
1987
Berwick DM, Budman S, Damico‑White J, et al.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Assessment%20of%20psychological%20morbidity%20in%20primary%20care%3A%20Explorations%20with%20the%20General%20Health%20Questionnaire.