A Multi-Informant Approach to Assessing Safety Behaviors among Adolescents: Psychometric Properties of the Subtle Avoidance Frequency Examination

被引:0
作者
Noor Qasmieh
Bridget A. Makol
Tara M. Augenstein
Melanie F. Lipton
Danielle E. Deros
Jeremy N. Karp
Lauren M. Keeley
Michelle L. Truong
Sarah J. Racz
Andres De Los Reyes
机构
[1] University of Maryland,Comprehensive Assessment and Intervention Program, Department of Psychology
来源
Journal of Child and Family Studies | 2018年 / 27卷
关键词
Adolescents; Multiple informants; Safety behaviors; Social anxiety; Subtle Avoidance Frequency Examination;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Safety behaviors are subtle avoidance strategies for minimizing distress within social situations (e.g., avoidance of eye contact). These behaviors factor prominently in the development and maintenance of social anxiety concerns, and when patients use these behaviors within psychosocial treatments for social anxiety, this may impede treatment response. Prior work supports the need to include measures of safety behaviors within evidence-based assessments of social anxiety. Along these lines, researchers developed the Subtle Avoidance Frequency Examination (SAFE) to assess safety behaviors among adults. However, we know relatively little about the SAFE’s psychometric properties when administered to adolescents. We tested the SAFE’s psychometric properties using adolescent self-reports and parallel parent reports in a mixed-clinical/community sample of 96 14 to 15 year-old adolescents and their parents (33 clinic-referred; 63 community control; 59.4% African American). Adolescent and parent SAFE reports displayed moderate correspondence with each other. Both adolescent and parent SAFE reports related positively to well-established measures of adolescent social anxiety and depressive symptoms. Both reports distinguished adolescents on referral status as well as cut scores on well-established measures of adolescent social anxiety. Further, both adolescent and parent SAFE reports displayed incremental validity in relation to survey reports of adolescent social anxiety, over-and-above survey reports of adolescent depressive symptoms, which commonly co-occur with social anxiety. However, adolescent (but not parent) SAFE reports predicted adolescents’ social anxiety and state arousal as displayed within social interactions with unfamiliar peer confederates. These findings have important implications for leveraging multi-informant approaches to assessing safety behaviors among adolescents.
引用
收藏
页码:1830 / 1843
页数:13
相关论文
共 205 条
[41]  
Beidel DC(2015)A false sense of security: safety behaviors erode objective speech performance in individuals with social anxiety disorder Behaviour Therapy 46 304-314
[42]  
De Los Reyes A(1991)The importance of behaviour in the maintenance of anxiety and panic: a cognitive account Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy 19 6-19
[43]  
Alfano CA(1996)Cognition-behaviour links in the persistence of panic Behaviour Research and Therapy 34 453-458
[44]  
Beidel DC(2008)Evidence-based psychosocial treatments for phobic and anxiety disorders in children and adolescents Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology 37 105-130
[45]  
De Los Reyes A(2002)The effects of safety-seeking behavior and guided threat reappraisal on fear reduction during exposure: an experimental investigation Behaviour Research and Therapy 40 235-251
[46]  
Aldao A(2006)Safety behaviors and social performance in patients with generalized social phobia Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy 20 17-31
[47]  
Thomas SA(2008)Social anxiety disorder The Lancet 371 1115-1125
[48]  
Daruwala S(1998)Use of the Beck Depression Inventory-II with adolescent psychiatric outpatients Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment 20 127-137
[49]  
Swan AJ(2004)Psychometric evaluation of the Social Anxiety Scale for Adolescents and the Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory for Children: construct validity and normative data Journal of Anxiety Disorders 18 665-679
[50]  
Van Wie M(2010)Safety behaviors and judgmental biases in social anxiety disorder Behaviour Research and Therapy 48 226-237