
Explaining the MDQ Test to New Patients in Under Five Minutes
Quick script for introducing the mdq to curious patients framing it as collaborative and reinforcing privacy
Patients often show up saying I saw something online about the MDQ test. When you only have a few minutes, use this conversational flow to keep the screening collaborative and low pressure.
Minute 1: Set the Stage
Thanks for asking about the Mood Disorder Questionnaire. It is a short checklist that helps us notice patterns in energy and mood swings. It does not diagnose you, but it tells us whether we should dig deeper together.
Minute 2: Describe the Mechanics
There are 13 yes or no questions. You will mark whether several of those experiences happened during the same period and then note how much they affected your day to day life. If you are not sure about any item, jot down a note and we will review it side by side.
Minute 3: Emphasize Collaboration
Tell patients you are looking for trends, not perfect memories. Encourage them to add context like sleep changes or seasonal triggers. Remind them that honest answers are more useful than trying to guess what the clinician wants to hear.
Minute 4: Reassure About Privacy
Explain that the form stays inside their medical record and is only shared with the care team. If they are filling it out online, point to the secure portal badge or describe your encryption process so it does not feel like another random internet quiz.
Minute 5: Outline What Comes Next
Let them know you will review the responses together, and regardless of the score, you will talk through treatment options that match their goals. Ending on next steps keeps the energy positive and shows that this is just the beginning of personalized care.
Trusted Bipolar & MDQ Resources
- Mayo Clinic bipolar diagnosis overview - Walks through the clinical interview, lab work, and differential diagnosis process.
- Cleveland Clinic overview of the MDQ - Explains how clinicians score, interpret, and follow up on questionnaire results.
- MedlinePlus bipolar disorder resource hub - Patient-friendly education covering symptoms, tests, and where to get help.
Author
Sarah Chen is a mental health researcher and content strategist focused on Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) education, bipolar screening workflows, and evidence-informed follow up care. As the lead writer for MDQTest resources, she translates clinical research into actionable guides that help clinics operationalize the MDQ across telehealth, primary care, and bilingual settings—without providing licensed clinical services.
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