Life-Events and Difficulties Schedule
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Life Events and Difficulties Schedule was created by Brown and Harris in 1978 to enable a more exact measurement of the stressfulness of life events. Instead of accumulating the stressfulness of different events, as was done in the SRRS by Holmes and Rahe (1967), they looked at individual events in detail. The schedule is made up of an interview by which as much contextual information around the event as possible is collected. The event is then rated by "blind" raters using this contextual information.
Critics of this method note the fact that the impact of the independent variable, the event itself, is measured by evaluating it using mediating and moderating variables.
[edit] References
- Holmes, T.H. and Rahe, R.H.: The social readjustments rating scales, Journal of Psychosomatic Reasearch, 11:213-218, 1967
- Brwon, G.W. and Harris, T.O.: Social origins of depression: A study of psychiatric disoer in women. London: Tavistock, 1978