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A user's guide to the General Health Questionnaire

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The article was published on 1988-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 5284 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: General Health Questionnaire & Questionnaire.

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Cross-cultural adaptation of health-related quality of life measures: literature review and proposed guidelines.

TL;DR: These guidelines include recommendations for obtaining semantic, idiomatic, experiential and conceptual equivalence in translation by using back-translation techniques and committee review, pre-testing techniques and re-examining the weight of scores.
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The Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI). A short diagnostic structured interview: reliability and validity according to the CIDI

TL;DR: The Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) as mentioned in this paper is a short diagnostic structured interview (DSI) developed in France and the United States to explore 17 disorders according to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM)-III-R diagnostic criteria.
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The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): development and UK validation

TL;DR: WEMWBS is a measure of mental well-being focusing entirely on positive aspects of mental health that offers promise as a short and psychometrically robust scale that discriminated between population groups in a way that is largely consistent with the results of other population surveys.
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Psychiatric disorders in children with autism spectrum disorders: Prevalence, comorbidity, and associated factors in a population-derived sample

TL;DR: Psychiatric disorders are common and frequently multiple in children with autism spectrum disorders and should be routinely evaluated in the clinical assessment of this group.
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Association of Torture and Other Potentially Traumatic Events With Mental Health Outcomes Among Populations Exposed to Mass Conflict and Displacement: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

TL;DR: A systematic review and meta-regression of the prevalence rates of PTSD and depression in the refugee and postconflict mental health field found nonrandom sampling, small sample sizes, and self-report questionnaires were associated with higher rates of mental disorder.