Plain-English translation of NCT07604753 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Researchers are testing whether a mental health screening tool called the CIDI 5.0 can accurately identify depression, anxiety, and trauma when used by trained interviewers. This tool was updated to match modern diagnostic guidelines, but researchers want to confirm it works reliably before using it in large population studies. Your participation would help them compare this screening tool against the gold-standard clinical interview (called the SCID-5).
A newer version of this mental health screening tool has shown promise in international research, but it hasn't been thoroughly tested to ensure it works accurately in all settings and populations. This study fills that gap by checking whether the screening tool catches the same diagnoses that experienced clinicians would make.
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You would first complete an interview using the CIDI 5.0 screening tool, which takes about an hour and asks about your mental health history. Some participants will then be randomly selected for a follow-up clinical interview (the SCID-5) with a trained clinician, which allows researchers to check how well the two methods match. The entire process is designed to help improve mental health screening for future research.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 5, 2026 · Not medical advice
Hong Kong
Enrollment target
~300 participants
Started
May 2025
Primary completion
January 2028
Age range
18 Years and older
Last updated on clinicaltrials.gov in May 2026.
Reach out to the team running this trial. Response times vary — some teams are faster than others.
Central contact
Yoona Kim, PhD
The University of Hong Kong
Tell us you're interested and we'll help connect you with the research team. We'll walk you through what to expect first — no email needed to get started.