Title of article
The Childrenʹs Automatic Thoughts Scale in a clinical sample: Psychometric properties and clinical utility
Author/Authors
Carolyn A. Schniering، نويسنده , , Heidi J. Lyneham، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
10
From page
1931
To page
1940
Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine the psychometric properties and clinical utility of the Childrenʹs Automatic Thoughts Scale (CATS; Schniering, C. A., & Rapee, R. M. (2002). Development and validation of a measure of childrenʹs automatic thoughts: The Childrenʹs Automatic Thoughts Scale. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 40, 1091–1109) in a large sample of anxious youth. The participants were 891 referred children and adolescents. Participants completed the CATS and a wide range of symptom measures, and were assessed via a structured diagnostic interview. Previous community-based psychometric properties were confirmed. The scale was highly sensitive to treatment change, and showed evidence of cognitive specificity with reductions in threat and failure beliefs, but not in hostility beliefs following treatment. The CATS demonstrated good convergent validity with related anxiety and depression scales, and moderate discriminant validity was found across anxious, anxious-depressed and anxious-oppositional groups. Implications for the assessment of child anxiety, and difficulties around children “faking good” on anxiety measures are discussed.
Keywords
cognition , Treatment change , child anxiety , assessment
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Record number
570216
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