PHQ-9 structure
The PHQ-9 asks about nine symptoms over the past 2 weeks, rated 0–3: 1. Little interest or pleasure in doing things 2. Feeling down, depressed, or hopeless 3. Trouble falling or staying asleep, or sleeping too much 4. Feeling tired or having little energy 5. Poor appetite or overeating 6. Feeling bad about yourself 7. Trouble concentrating 8. Moving or speaking slowly; or being restless/fidgety 9. Thoughts that you would be better off dead or hurting yourself Total score range: 0–27. Cutoffs: - 0–4: minimal - 5–9: mild - 10–14: moderate - 15–19: moderately severe - 20–27: severe The PHQ-9 maps almost 1:1 to DSM-5 major depressive disorder criteria. This is deliberate — the PHQ-9 was designed to assess DSM criteria directly.
SDS structure (brief recap)
SDS has 20 items covering affective (feeling sad), psychological (concentration, fatigue), somatic (sleep, appetite, heart rate, digestion), and cognitive (guilt, suicidal thoughts) symptoms. Raw score converts to index 25–100. Cutoffs: <50 normal, 50–59 mild, 60–69 moderate, 70+ severe. See sds-depression-interpretation article for detail. Key contrast with PHQ-9: SDS has more somatic items (8 out of 20 = 40% of items) and distributes the symptom coverage more broadly. PHQ-9 is more compact and tightly DSM-matched.
Direct comparison
| Dimension | PHQ-9 | SDS |
|---|---|---|
| Items | 9 | 20 |
| Time to complete | ~3 minutes | ~8 minutes |
| Response scale | 0-3 (4 options) | 1-4 (4 options) |
| Score range | 0-27 | Index 25-100 |
| DSM mapping | Direct | Indirect |
| Somatic weighting | Moderate (items 3, 4, 5, 8) | Heavy (8/20 items) |
| Clinical adoption | Very widespread | Moderate, declining in US |
| Cross-cultural use | Wide, many validated translations | Very wide, longer history |
| EMR integration | Common | Less common |
| Cost | Free | Free (public domain) |
When PHQ-9 is better
Most contemporary clinical contexts: - **Primary care screening**: brevity matters; PHQ-9 fits 3 minutes of a 15-minute appointment where SDS would take 8+ - **Mental health treatment monitoring**: weekly or biweekly re-administration tracks response to treatment; PHQ-9's shorter format supports routine monitoring - **Integration with DSM-5 diagnosis**: PHQ-9 scores map directly to diagnostic criteria, supporting clinician workflow - **Telehealth / electronic intake**: PHQ-9 is standard in most electronic patient-portal systems - **Research use**: PHQ-9 has become the default depression screening instrument in contemporary clinical research
When SDS is better
**Populations with somatic-heavy presentations**: cultures or individuals where depression shows as physical symptoms (body aches, digestive issues, fatigue without clear mood depression). SDS's 8 somatic items capture this better than PHQ-9's fewer. **Screening where broader symptom coverage matters**: comprehensive assessment rather than quick triage. SDS covers more symptom space. **Specific research applications where longitudinal comparison to historical data matters**: SDS has 60-year longitudinal literature; PHQ-9's history goes back only to 2001. **Self-administered depth**: for someone doing serious self-assessment rather than triage, SDS's broader questioning generates more reflective material.
