METHODS develops a living evidence synthesis platform for the psychometric properties of 4 major mental health measures
Astrid Chevance (PI) and Karolin Krause (Co-PI), members of the METHODS team at CRESS, were successful in obtaining funding from the Wellcome Trust to develop a living evidence synthesis platform on the psychometric properties of four widely used mental health measures.
- Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) – adult depression
- Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7) – adult anxiety
- Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS-25) – anxiety and depression in children and adolescents
- World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule-12 (WHODAS 2.0) – functional impairment in adults
These instruments were selected within the framework of the Common Measures in Mental Health Science (CMMHS) initiative to address the substantial fragmentation of outcome measurement in mental health research. Such fragmentation severely limits the comparability of studies and represents a major barrier to the synthesis of robust evidence.
- Living evidence synthesis: the conduct of four “living” systematic reviews, including the appraisal of psychometric properties and assessment of risk of bias.
- Platform development: the design of a digital platform integrating continuous evidence-updating infrastructure, alongside a web interface informed by behavioural research with measure users to support appropriate use of findings.
- Integration of lived experience: a cross-cutting workstream embedding lived experience across all stages of the project, including a review of the literature on the impact of completing mental health measures on respondents, and an ethnographic evaluation of lived-experience participation throughout the project.

The project is supported by an international collaboration of partners, including the Epistemonikos Foundation (Santiago) for platform development; The Hospital for Sick Children (Toronto), with Dr Suneeta Monga and her team leading the review of the RCADS-25; the GALENOS project (Universities of Oxford and Bern), with Professor Andrea Cipriani and Dr Georgia Stellantis contributing expertise on living evidence platforms; the COSMIN group (Amsterdam UMC), with Dr Wieneke Mokkink providing methodological guidance on psychometric appraisal; and the Centre for Anthropology and Mental Health Research in Action (SOAS University of London), with Dr Neil Armstrong leading work on lived-experience integration.
By Karolin Krause & Astrid Chevance