Dass-167

The DASS-167 consists of 42 items, divided into three subscales:

Research supports the reliability and validity of the DASS-167. Studies have reported high internal consistency coefficients (α = 0.94-0.97) for the subscales, indicating good reliability. The DASS-167 has also demonstrated convergent validity with other measures of depression, anxiety, and stress. DASS-167

The DASS-167 was first introduced in 1995 by Ron Andsher, Peter Lovibond, and Sydney Lovibond, as an extension of the original DASS-21 scale. The developers aimed to create a more comprehensive assessment tool that could capture the complexities of mental health, beyond just depression and anxiety. The DASS-167 was designed to assess three distinct but interrelated constructs: depression, anxiety, and stress. The DASS-167 consists of 42 items, divided into

The final act is a masterful, uninterrupted 30-minute sequence. 167 reaches "Critical Mass"—a state where her biometric monitors flatline, not from death, but from total system overload. The lighting shifts to pure white, the synth-score drops to a deafening silence, and the scene becomes an abstract, almost hypnotic display of complete physical surrender. The DASS-167 was first introduced in 1995 by