Literature DB >> 10357017

The revised Anxious Thoughts and Tendencies (AT&T) scale: a general measure of anxiety-prone cognitive style.

E H Uhlenhuth1, T McCarty, S Paine, T Warner.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The AT&T was developed from a perspective which proposes that panic disorder with agoraphobia arises from interaction between a specific biological predisposition, expressed in spontaneous panic attacks, and a general anxiety-prone cognitive style. Many items of the original AT&T, a putative measure of the cognitive component, were complex and ambiguous; and normative data were not available.
METHOD: In this research, the items were simplified and clarified. A community sample of northern New Mexico Hispanics and geographically matched non-Hispanic whites was identified from an earlier epidemiological study. The sample included 151 Anglos and 168 Hispanics; 98 respondents aged 18-34, 75 aged 35-49, 69 aged 50-64, and 77 aged 65 or more; and 111 men and 208 women.
RESULTS: Factor analysis produced one major factor with high loadings from the 15 negatively worded items, that accounted for about 41% of the total variation in the 15 items. The mean major factor score for Anglos was 1.65 with a standard deviation of 0.48, and for Hispanics was 1.76+/-0.52. F = 4.17, df = 1/311, P < 0.05, and effect size d = 0.22. There were no significant age or gender effects. Item analysis of the major factor produced item/total correlations from 0.49 to 0.68 and a Cronbach's alpha of 0.91. In a separate clinical sample of 30 patients with panic disorder, the test-retest correlation of the major factor at baseline and after 8 weeks of treatment was 0.75. In the community sample, the correlations of the major factor with anxiety-related clusters of the SCL-90 were: Somatization, 0.36; Anxiety, 0.53: and Phobia, 0.44. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: We recommend that the AT&amp;T be reduced to the 15 items of its major factor, and we supply quantiles and moments based on the full community sample of 319 as a standard of comparison. Further research with the AT&amp;T in clinical samples of patients with anxiety disorders is ongoing.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10357017     DOI: 10.1016/s0165-0327(98)00061-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Affect Disord        ISSN: 0165-0327            Impact factor:   4.839


  1 in total

1.  Roles of cognitive characteristics in tinnitus patients.

Authors:  So-Young Lee; Ji-Hae Kim; Sung-Hwa Hong; Dong-Soo Lee
Journal:  J Korean Med Sci       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 2.153

  1 in total

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