PHQ-9 is a screening layer, not a diagnosis
PHQ-9 is one of the most validated depression screening tools in primary care and digital health workflows. Its value is consistency and speed, but interpretation still requires context.
Score ranges and practical meaning
- 0-4: Minimal symptoms
- 5-9: Mild symptoms
- 10-14: Moderate symptoms
- 15-19: Moderately severe symptoms
- 20-27: Severe symptoms
Scores help estimate current burden, but function and safety risk matter just as much.
Why item patterns matter
Two users can have the same total score with very different clinical risk. A profile with poor sleep and fatigue is not equivalent to one with self-harm thoughts. Item 9 needs immediate attention regardless of total score.
Common interpretation mistakes
- Reading PHQ-9 as a stand-alone diagnosis
- Retesting daily and reacting to noise
- Ignoring major stressors (grief, illness, financial shock)
- Using one score to make medication decisions without clinical care
Better workflow for users
- Complete the test honestly for the last 14 days.
- Note major life context.
- Review item pattern, not only total score.
- Escalate to a licensed professional when symptoms persist or worsen.
Safety guidance
If self-harm thoughts are present, contact local emergency services immediately. In the U.S., call or text 988.
References
- Kroenke K, Spitzer RL, Williams JBW
- APA depression treatment guidance
- USPSTF depression screening recommendations