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  1. Article: Measuring COVID-19 Related Anxiety in Parents: Psychometric Comparison of Four Different Inventories.

    Kubb, Christian / Foran, Heather M

    JMIR mental health

    2020  Volume 7, Issue 12, Page(s) e24507

    Abstract: ... Factor analysis suggests that existing COVID-19-related anxiety scales measure different latent constructs ... the distributions, validities, and reliabilities of four different COVID-19 anxiety scales: Fear of COVID-19 Scale ... to assess COVID-19-related anxiety among parents.: Methods: A cross-sectional web-based survey of 515 ...

    Abstract Background: The COVID-19 outbreak and the measures to contain the global pandemic can have an impact on the well-being and mental health status of individuals. Parents of young children are particularly at risk for high levels of parental stress due to the current public health crisis, which can impact parenting behaviors and children's well-being. Although different initial scales have been developed to measure COVID-19-related anxiety, they have not yet been tested sufficiently in parent samples. A brief measure of COVID-19-related anxiety is necessary for both quick assessment in practice and in larger epidemiological studies of parents.
    Objective: The purpose of this study is to compare the distributions, validities, and reliabilities of four different COVID-19 anxiety scales: Fear of COVID-19 Scale, Coronavirus Anxiety Scale, Pandemic Anxiety Scale, and one subscale of the COVID Stress Scales. Based on the psychometric properties of these scales, we aim to provide recommendations for a brief unidimensional inventory to assess COVID-19-related anxiety among parents.
    Methods: A cross-sectional web-based survey of 515 German-speaking parents (465 mothers, 90.3%) with at least one child aged 0-6 years was conducted during a 6-week period (June 29 to August 9, 2020). Half of the parents were recruited via Facebook parenting groups, while the other half were recruited through childcare centers. We psychometrically tested 25 items on COVID-19-related anxiety using the framework of classical test theory, including item analysis, correlational analysis of family variables, and exploratory factor analysis. Moreover, an item response theory approach was applied to estimate item discriminations and item difficulties.
    Results: Based on the psychometric properties, three items of the Pandemic Anxiety Scale were identified as a single unidimensional factor. The adapted scale demonstrated acceptable internal consistency (α=.79), moderate to high item discrimination, strong positive intercorrelation with two other COVID-19 anxiety scales, and a small positive association with parenting stress. Mothers and fathers did not differ in total scores (t
    Conclusions: Factor analysis suggests that existing COVID-19-related anxiety scales measure different latent constructs of anxiety. Furthermore, all scales showed only small to moderate correlations with trait health anxiety, suggesting that COVID-19-related anxiety is distinct from general health anxiety. The adapted "disease anxiety" subscale of the Pandemic Anxiety Scale is an economical measure for assessing COVID-19-related anxiety in parents. Directions for future research are outlined.
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-03
    Publishing country Canada
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2798262-2
    ISSN 2368-7959
    ISSN 2368-7959
    DOI 10.2196/24507
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article: Measuring COVID-19 Related Anxiety in Parents: Psychometric Comparison of Four Different Inventories

    Kubb, Christian / Foran, Heather M

    Abstract: ... COVID-19 related anxiety scales are measuring different latent constructs of anxiety. Furthermore ... inventory to assess Covid-19 related anxiety among parents. METHODS: A cross-sectional online survey on 515 ... reliabilities of four different COVID-19 anxiety scales: Fear of COVID-19 Scale (FCV19-S), Coronavirus Anxiety ...

    Abstract BACKGROUND: The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak and measures to contain the global pandemic can have an impact on individual's well-being and mental health status. Parents of young children are particularly at risk for high levels of parental stress due to the current public health crisis, which can impact parenting behaviors and children's well-being. Although different initial scales have been developed to measure COVID-19 related anxiety, they have not yet been tested sufficiently in parent samples. A brief measure of COVID-19-related anxiety is necessary for both quick assessment in practice and in larger epidemiological studies of parents. OBJECTIVE: To compare the distributions, validities and reliabilities of four different COVID-19 anxiety scales: Fear of COVID-19 Scale (FCV19-S), Coronavirus Anxiety Scale (CAS), Pandemic Anxiety Scale (PAS) and one subscale of the COVID-19 Stress Scale (CSS). Based on the psychometric properties, the purpose of this study is to provide recommendations for a brief unidimensional inventory to assess Covid-19 related anxiety among parents. METHODS: A cross-sectional online survey on 515 German-speaking parents (90.3% mothers) with a child aged 0 to 6 years was conducted during a six-week period (June 29 to August 9, 2020). Half of the parents were recruited via Facebook parenting groups while the other half were recruited through childcare centers. Twenty-five items on Covid-19 related anxiety were psychometrically tested with the framework of Classical Test Theory (CTT), including item analysis, correlational analysis with family variables and explorative factor analysis (EFA). Moreover, an Item Response Theory (IRT) approach was applied to estimate item discriminations, item difficulties and test information functions. RESULTS: Based on the psychometric properties, three items of the Pandemic Anxiety Scale (PAS) were identified as a single unidimensional factor. The adapted scale demonstrated acceptable internal consistency (α = .79), moderate to high item discrimination, strong positive inter-correlation with two other COVID-19 anxiety scales, and a small positive association with parenting stress. Mothers and fathers did not differ in total scores, t(513)= -.79, p = .42. CONCLUSIONS: Factor analysis suggests that existing COVID-19 related anxiety scales are measuring different latent constructs of anxiety. Furthermore, all scales showed only small to moderate correlations with trait health anxiety, suggesting COVID-19 related anxiety is distinct from general health anxiety. The adapted subscale "disease anxiety" of den Pandemic Anxiety Scale is an economical measure for assessing COVID-19 anxiety in parents. Directions for future research are outlined.
    Keywords covid19
    Publisher WHO
    Document type Article
    Note WHO #Covidence: #33197233
    Database COVID19

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  3. Article: Measuring COVID-19 related anxiety in parents

    Kubb, Christian / Foran, Heather M.

    JMIR Mental Health

    Psychometric comparison of four different inventories

    2020  Volume 7, Issue 12, Page(s) No

    Abstract: ... of the Pandemic Anxiety Scale is an economical measure for assessing COVID-19-related anxiety in parents ... suggests that existing COVID-19-related anxiety scales measure different latent constructs of anxiety ... the distributions, validities, and reliabilities of four different COVID-19 anxiety scales: Fear of COVID-19 Scale ...

    Title translation Messung der COVID-19-bezogenen Angst bei Eltern: Psychometrischer Vergleich von vier verschiedenen Inventaren
    Abstract Background: The COVID-19 outbreak and the measures to contain the global pandemic can have an impact on the well-being and mental health status of individuals. Parents of young children are particularly at risk for high levels of parental stress due to the current public health crisis, which can impact parenting behaviors and children's well-being. Although different initial scales have been developed to measure COVID-19-related anxiety, they have not yet been tested sufficiently in parent samples. A brief measure of COVID-19-related anxiety is necessary for both quick assessment in practice and in larger epidemiological studies of parents. Objective: The purpose of this study is to compare the distributions, validities, and reliabilities of four different COVID-19 anxiety scales: Fear of COVID-19 Scale, Coronavirus Anxiety Scale, Pandemic Anxiety Scale, and one subscale of the COVID Stress Scales. Based on the psychometric properties of these scales, we aim to provide recommendations for a brief unidimensional inventory to assess COVID-19-related anxiety among parents. Methods: A cross-sectional web-based survey of 515 German-speaking parents (465 mothers, 90.3%) with at least one child aged 0-6 years was conducted during a 6-week period (June 29 to August 9, 2020). Half of the parents were recruited via Facebook parenting groups, while the other half were recruited through childcare centers. We psychometrically tested 25 items on COVID-19-related anxiety using the framework of classical test theory, including item analysis, correlational analysis of family variables, and exploratory factor analysis. Moreover, an item response theory approach was applied to estimate item discriminations and item difficulties. Results: Based on the psychometric properties, three items of the Pandemic Anxiety Scale were identified as a single unidimensional factor. The adapted scale demonstrated acceptable internal consistency (alpha=.79), moderate to high item discrimination, strong positive intercorrelation with two other COVID-19 anxiety scales, and a small positive association with parenting stress. Mothers and fathers did not differ in total scores (t513 =-0.79, P=.42). Conclusions: Factor analysis suggests that existing COVID-19-related anxiety scales measure different latent constructs of anxiety. Furthermore, all scales showed only small to moderate correlations with trait health anxiety, suggesting that COVID-19-related anxiety is distinct from general health anxiety. The adapted "disease anxiety" subscale of the Pandemic Anxiety Scale is an economical measure for assessing COVID-19-related anxiety in parents. Directions for future research are outlined.
    Keywords Angst ; Anxiety ; COVID-19 ; Coronavirus ; Eltern ; Fragebögen ; Health Anxiety ; Krankheitsangst ; Pandemics ; Pandemie ; Parents ; Questionnaires ; Stress ; Test Construction ; Test Reliability ; Test Validity ; Testkonstruktion ; Testreliabilität ; Testvalidität
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2798262-2
    ISSN 2368-7959
    ISSN 2368-7959
    DOI 10.2196/24507
    Database PSYNDEX

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