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Clinical competency

Depression symptom and remission monitoring

Teaches structured monitoring of depressive symptoms, response, and remission across treatment and follow-up. Learners use standardized scales and clinical review to track change and identify deterioration or non-response.

Primary clinical guidelineModern clinical

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Guidelines

10

Courses

0

Providers

0

Protocols

4

Classification

Source quality

Protocol paperTrial supplement

Also known as

Assess and monitor depressive symptom severityClinical assessment and outcome monitoringDepression severity assessmentDepression symptom assessmentDepression symptom monitoringKnowledge of major depressive disorder severity and symptom measurementMonitor depressive symptoms and clinical changeMonitor patient self-reported symptom outcomesMonitoring depressive worsening and treatment nonresponseSymptom and remission monitoring

Across the manuals

The manuals converge on repeated monitoring of depressive symptoms over time, using structured measures at baseline and during treatment or follow-up. Across the extracts, this includes clinician-rated and self-reported scales, review of symptom trajectories, and attention to whether change is meaningful, sustained, or absent. Several sources also link symptom monitoring to remission, response, and relapse or worsening, rather than treating depression as a one-time assessment. They also converge on using these assessments to inform clinical review when symptoms deteriorate or response is insufficient. Some manuals explicitly connect worsening scores or non-response with referral, reconsideration of treatment, or removal from the active intervention, while others frame the same process as documenting improvement and remission status over follow-up. The sources differ in how they operationalise outcomes, with some using protocol-defined thresholds such as remission or relapse criteria, and others focusing more generally on severity change and clinical improvement. The manuals differ in the specific instruments and timepoints they emphasise. Some rely on clinician-rated scales such as MADRS, others on self-report tools such as IDS-SR, QIDS-SR-16, or BDI, and one source includes broader outcome sets covering functioning, quality of life, burnout, demoralisation, and connectedness. They also differ in how explicitly they define response, with some giving numeric cut-offs, while others describe response and remission more qualitatively.

In practice

What it looks like on the ground

  • Reviews repeated depression scale scores across baseline, treatment, and follow-up
  • Compares clinician-rated and self-reported symptom trajectories
  • Documents remission, response, relapse, or worsening using protocol thresholds
  • Flags non-response or deterioration for clinical review or referral

Assessment signals in the sources

IDS-SRMADRSCGI-SCGI-C

Synthesised from the linked source documents; refreshed as the library updates.

Linked sources

The guidelines, courses, and providers that evidence this competency. Full lists are a Blossom Pro feature.

Linked guidelines (10)

  • Efficacy and safety of low- versus high-dose-LSD-assisted therapy in patients with major depression: A randomized trial

    LSDEvidence score: 90

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Depression symptom and remission monitoring - Clinical Competency | Blossom