OpiCalc Logo

OpiCalc

989 Clinical Tools

Logo
OpiCalc
ACE-III (Cognitive Examination)AIMS (Tardive Dyskinesia)ASRM (Altman Mania Scale)ASRS-v1.1 (Adult ADHD Screen)ASSIST (WHO Substance Screen)AUDIT (Alcohol Use Disorders)AUDIT-C (Alcohol Screen)BARS (Akathisia)BDI-II (Beck Depression)BPRS (Brief Psychiatric Rating)BSDS (Bipolar Spectrum Screen)C-SSRS (Suicide Severity)CAGE QuestionnaireCAPS-5 (PTSD Clinical Interview)CDR (Dementia Staging)CDSS (Schizophrenia Depression)CIWA-Ar (Alcohol Withdrawal)COWS (Opioid Withdrawal)Clozapine Safety (REMS)DAST-10 (Drug Abuse Screen)DES-II (Dissociation Scale)EDE-Q (Eating Disorder Severity)EPDS (Postnatal Depression)Epworth Sleepiness ScaleFAST (Alzheimer's Staging)Fagerstrom (Nicotine Dependence)GAD-2 (Anxiety Screen)GAD-7 (Anxiety Severity)GAF (Global Functioning)HAM-D 17 (Hamilton Depression)HCL-32 (Hypomania Checklist)IES-R (Trauma Impact)ISI (Insomnia Severity)LSAS (Social Anxiety)MADRS (Depression Rating)MARSIPAN (Medical Risk in AN)MDQ (Bipolar Screen)MSI-BPD (Borderline PD Screen)Manchester Self-Harm RuleMetabolic Syndrome (Psych)MoCA (Cognitive Assessment)OCI-R (OCD Screen)PANSS (Schizophrenia Severity)PCL-5 (PTSD Checklist DSM-5)PHQ Panic ModulePHQ-2 (Depression Screen)PHQ-9 (Depression Severity)PSP (Personal/Social Performance)PSQI (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality)QTc Prolongation (Psychiatry)SAD PERSONS ScaleSAFE-T ProtocolSBQ-R (Suicidal Behaviors)SCOFF (Eating Disorder Screen)SPIN (Social Phobia)Simpson-Angus Scale (EPS)Y-BOCS (OCD Severity)YMRS (Mania Severity)
OpiCalc Logo

OpiCalc

Open-access clinical infrastructure. Built to the standard every clinician deserves — fast, private, and free.

Zero data stored
Always free
Our mission & transparency

Get in Touch

Tool request, clinical feedback, or partnership inquiry — we read everything.

WhatsApp feedback
Email us
Partnership inquiry

© 2026 OpiCalc • Calculated Care

ProtocolsAboutPrivacyTerms

HAM-D 17 (Hamilton Depression)

Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D 17)

Clinician-administered assessment for depression severity. Complete all 17 items based on clinical observation and patient interview.

1

Depressed Mood

Sadness, hopelessness, helplessness, worthlessness

2

Feelings of Guilt

Self-reproach, ideas of guilt

3

Suicide

Thoughts, gestures, or attempts

4

Insomnia (Early)

Difficulty falling asleep

5

Insomnia (Middle)

Waking during the night

6

Insomnia (Late)

Waking in early hours

7

Work and Activities

Loss of interest, decreased productivity

8

Retardation

Slowness of thought and speech

9

Agitation

Restlessness, pacing, hand-wringing

10

Anxiety (Psychic)

Tension, irritability, worry

11

Anxiety (Somatic)

Physical correlates of anxiety (GI, CV, etc.)

12

Somatic Symptoms (GI)

Loss of appetite, constipation

13

Somatic Symptoms (General)

Heaviness in limbs, backache, headache

14

Genital Symptoms

Loss of libido, menstrual disturbances

15

Hypochondriasis

Preoccupation with physical health

16

Loss of Weight

Measured or reported by patient

17

Insight

Understanding of being depressed

© OpiCalc Clinical Intelligence

Hamilton M. (1960)

Guidelines & Evidence

Clinical Details

Section 1

When to Use

Application Guide

Quantifying the severity of depressive symptoms in patients with a confirmed diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD).
Gold standard for clinical trials and monitoring pharmaceutical treatment response.
Assessing specific somatic vs. psychological symptom clusters (e.g., insomnia, weight loss, agitation).
Evaluating suicidality risk as part of a comprehensive psychiatric review.

Clinical Environment

The HAM-D 17 is a clinician-administered scale. Unlike the PHQ-9, it requires a trained professional to interview the patient and observe non-verbal cues (e.g., psychomotor retardation).
Section 2

Formula & Logic

Severity Stratification

Score 0 – 7Normal / Remission
Score 8 – 13Mild Depression
Score 14 – 18Moderate Depression
Score 19 – 22Severe Depression
Score ≥ 23Very Severe Depression

Somatic Focus

The scale places significant weight on physical symptoms: three items are dedicated to insomnia (initial, middle, late), and others assess biological markers such as weight loss and gastrointestinal symptoms.
Section 3

Pearls/Pitfalls

The "Melancholic" Bias

The HAM-D 17 excels at identifying classic melancholic depression but may under-represent "atypical" symptoms such as hypersomnia or hyperphagia.

Practical Tips

Differentiate between "Inhibited" and "Agitated" psychomotor states; both reflect severe illness but present differently.
Item 3 (Suicide) should be explored thoroughly if the patient scores 2 or higher.
Compare scores over time; a 50% reduction from baseline is the standard definition of clinical "Response".
Section 4

Next Steps

Remission and Response

01
Response: Goal is ≥ 50% reduction in total score.
02
Remission: Goal is a score of ≤ 7.
03
Relapse Prevention: If remission is achieved, maintain treatment for at least 6–12 months to prevent recurrence.
04
Adjustment: If < 25% reduction after 4 weeks of optimized dosing, consider switching or augmenting therapy.
Section 5

Evidence Appraisal

Primary Reference

A rating scale for depression

Hamilton M • Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry. 1960;23:56–62. The foundational paper that defined the HAM-D as the clinical benchmark.

Section 6

Literature

Professor Max Hamilton

Developed by Max Hamilton at the University of Leeds. It was the first scale that allowed clinicians to objectively measure changes in a patient's depressive state during the early era of tricyclic antidepressants.

Last Comprehensive Review: 2026

Related Psychiatry Tools

PHQ-9
PHQ-2
MADRS
EPDS
Geriatric Depression Scale
Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology
Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology
Patient Health Questionnaire for Adolescents
Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale — Cognitive
Eating Attitudes Test
Have feedback about this calculator?Let us know.