Title of article
Reference values for anxiety questionnaires: The Leiden Routine Outcome Monitoring Study
Author/Authors
Schulte-van Maaren، نويسنده , , Yvonne W.M. and Giltay، نويسنده , , Erik J. and van Hemert، نويسنده , , Albert M. and Zitman، نويسنده , , Frans G. and de Waal، نويسنده , , Margot W.M. and Carlier، نويسنده , , Ingrid V.E. Carlier، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
11
From page
1008
To page
1018
Abstract
AbstractBackground
nitoring of patients with an anxiety disorder can benefit from Routine Outcome Monitoring (ROM). As anxiety disorders differ in phenomenology, several anxiety questionnaires are included in ROM: Brief Scale for Anxiety (BSA), PADUA Inventory Revised (PI-R), Panic Appraisal Inventory (PAI), Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ), Worry Domains Questionnaire (WDQ), Social Interaction, Anxiety Scale (SIAS), Social Phobia Scale (SPS), and the Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R). We aimed to generate reference values for both ‘healthy’ and ‘clinically anxious’ populations for these anxiety questionnaires.
s
luded 1295 subjects from the general population (ROM reference-group) and 5066 psychiatric outpatients diagnosed with a specific anxiety disorder (ROM patient-group). The MINI was used as diagnostic device in both the ROM reference group and the ROM patient group. To define limits for one-sided reference intervals (95th percentile; P95) the outermost 5% of observations were used. Receiver Operating Characteristics (ROC) analyses were used to yield alternative cut-off values for the anxiety questionnaires.
s
e ROM reference-group the mean age was 40.3 years (SD=12.6), and for the ROM patient-group it was 36.5 years (SD=11.9). Females constituted 62.8% of the reference-group and 64.4% of the patient-group. P95 ROM reference group cut-off values for reference versus clinically anxious populations were 11 for the BSA, 43 for the PI-R, 37 for the PAI Anticipated Panic, 47 for the PAI Perceived Consequences, 65 for the PAI Perceived Self-efficacy, 66 for the PSWQ, 74 for the WDQ, 32 for the SIAS, 19 for the SPS, and 36 for IES-R. ROC analyses yielded slightly lower reference values. The discriminative power of all eight anxiety questionnaires was very high.
tions
ntial non-response and limited generalizability.
sions
ght anxiety questionnaires a comprehensive set of reference values was provided. Reference values were generally higher in women than in men, implying the use of gender-specific cut-off values. Each instrument can be offered to every patient with MAS disorders to make responsible decisions about continuing, changing or terminating therapy.
Keywords
reference values , Routine Outcome Monitoring , Instruments , Anxiety Disorders , Anxiety , questionnaires
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number
1433896
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