| Literature DB >> 28620340 |
Doreen Huppert1, Eva Grill2, Thomas Brandt1.
Abstract
AIMS: To construct and validate a short scale for the assessment of the severity of visual height intolerance (vHI) and acrophobia.Entities:
Keywords: Rasch analysis; acrophobia; fear of heights; metric interval scale; questionnaire; visual height intolerance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28620340 PMCID: PMC5451500 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
A metric interval scale for estimating the severity of visual height intolerance (vHI).
| Visual Height Intolerance Severity Scale (vHISS) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Have you already experienced vHI while looking from a height? (distressing instability when standing or moving) | Yes □ | No □ |
| Continue to fill out the rest of the questionnaire only if you answered “yes.” | Continue | Finished |
| 1. Because of your vHI, how much difficulty did you recently have doing sports? | 0 □ | No difficulty |
| 1 □ | Any difficulty (a little/moderately/quite a lot/very much) | |
| 2. Because of your vHI, how much difficulty did you recently have in your daily activities? | 0 □ | No difficulty |
| 1 □ | A little | |
| 2 □ | Moderately/quite a lot/very much | |
| 3. Because of your vHI, how much is your quality of life affected? | 0 □ | Not at all |
| 1 □ | A little | |
| 2 □ | Moderately/quite a lot/very much | |
| 4. I have vHI when exposed to heights | 0 □ | … occasionally |
| 1 □ | … often/frequently/always | |
| 5. Now I have vHI that is … | 0 □ | … less strong than before |
| 1 □ | … just as strong as before | |
| 2 □ | … stronger than before | |
| 6. I have/had vHI for longer than 6 months | 0 □ | No |
| 1 □ | Yes | |
| 7. What | □ | a. Trembling |
| □ | b. Palpitations | |
| □ | c. Inner agitation | |
| □ | d. Sweating/moist hands | |
| □ | e. Light-headedness | |
| □ | f. Postural (to-and-fro) dizziness | |
| □ | g. Weakness in the knees | |
| □ | h. Instability of stance and gait | |
| □ | i. Malaise/queasy feeling in the stomach | |
| □ | j. Oppression | |
| □ | k. Fearfulness | |
| □ | l. Mental image of falling | |
| □ | m. Gait disorder | |
| □ | n. Others ……… | |
| □ | None of the above | |
| 8. vHI is induced by my … (multiple answers possible) | □ | Standing on or climbing up a tower |
| □ | Standing on or walking over a bridge | |
| □ | Standing on or walking up steps | |
| □ | Standing on or climbing up a ladder | |
| □ | Standing on or walking on a balcony | |
| □ | Looking out of a window | |
| □ | Standing or walking on a scaffolding | |
| □ | Standing or walking on a roof | |
| □ | Riding on a carousel or a Ferris wheel | |
| □ | Riding in a ski lift or gondola | |
| □ | Hiking/mountain climbing | |
| □ | Rock climbing | |
| □ | Other situations. If yes, please name | |
| □ | ………………………………… | |
| □ | ………………………………… | |
| 9. Do you feel very intense fear or extremely strong fear when exposed to heights? | □ | Yes |
| □ | No | |
| 10. I try in advance to avoid exposure to heights | □ | No |
| □ | Yes | |
Scoring instructions for the vHISS.
The scale is based on a set of eight questions for determining the severity of vHI. Two of the questions are lists: one of symptoms and one of triggers. Two additional questions are for the assessment of acrophobia.
1. Severity of vHI.
• Sum up the score of items 1–6.
• Add up the number of symptoms reported from List A (item 7). If there are less than 4 symptoms, add 0 to the total score; if there are 4 or more symptoms, add 1 to the total score.
• Likewise, add up the number of triggers from List B (item 8). If there are less than 4 triggers, add 0 to the total score. If there are 4–6 triggers, add 1 to the total score. For 7–9 triggers, add 2 to the total score. For 10 or more triggers, add 3 to the total score.
The sum of items 1–6, plus items of List A plus items of List B yields the total severity score.
Severity score:
□ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
2. Diagnosis of acrophobia.
To meet DSM-V criteria for the diagnosis, one must have
• At least one of the vegetative symptoms (a.–d.) from List A.
• Two other additional symptoms from List A.
• A positive response to item 6 (duration of at least 6 months) of the severity scale (yes).
• A positive response to items 9 and 10 (yes).
Acrophobia:
□ □
yes no
Items included in the partial credit model and their rescaling.
| Score | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Because of your visual height intolerance (vHI), how much difficulty did you recently have in sports (engaging in competitive and formal or informal organized games, alone or in a group)? | S1 | Not at all | Moderately | ||
| Because of your vHI, how much difficulty did you recently have in your daily activities? | S2 | Not at all | Moderately | Quite a lot | |
| Because of your vHI, how much is your quality of life affected? | S3 | Not at all | Moderately | Quite a lot | |
| I have already experienced once vHI when exposed to heights | S4 | Occasionally | Often/always | ||
| Now I have vHI that is … | S5 | Less strong than before | Just as strong as before | Stronger than before | |
| I have/had vHI for longer than 6 months | S6 | No | Yes | ||
| Number of symptoms (List A) | S7 | (<4) | (≥4) | ||
| Number of different triggers (List B) | S8 | (<4) | (4–6) | (7–9) | (10+) |
| Do you feel a very strong fear or extremely strong fear when exposed to vHI? | S9 | ||||
| I try in advance to avoid exposure to heights | S10 | ||||
| I quit as fast as possible all situations of acute exposure to heights | S11 | ||||
Items S9–S11 did not show good fit to the model and were therefore eliminated.
Sums yield a raw score from 0 to 13 where 0 = least severely affected and 13 = most severely affected.
Summary measures of model fit from the start to the final set.
| Items | Persons | Item-trait-interaction | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Fit residual | Location | Fit residual | |||||||||
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Mean | SD | Chi-squared | Person separation index* | |||
| Start | 200 (11) | 0.00 | 0.96 | 0.17 | 3.22 | −0.15 | 0.80 | −0.23 | 0.75 | 258.41 (99) | 0.000 | 0.64 |
| Mid-point | 200 (10) | 0.00 | 1.12 | 0.03 | 1.15 | −0.16 | 1.15 | −0.20 | 0.82 | 113.35 (90) | 0.047 | 0.67 |
| Final | 200 (8) | 0.00 | 0.90 | 0.11 | 1.09 | −0.50 | 1.10 | −0.16 | 0.82 | 72.25 (64) | 0.224 | 0.61 |
Summary statistics of a selected mid-point is provided to demonstrate the iterative approach.
*Person separation indices can only be interpreted if there is sufficient overall fit of the data to the Rasch model, i.e., the p-value is non-significant.
Figure 1Person-item threshold distribution map of the scale. This indicates how persons and their abilities relate to item difficulty. The smaller the item difficulty, the higher the probability that an item will be completed. The information curve indicates the proportion of information provided by the items.
Figure 2Score distributions of the visual height intolerance severity scale stratified by presence (yes, . Histograms are shown with overlaid normal and kernel densities. Diamonds in box plots indicate mean scores, whiskers display the maximum and minimum observations below and above the 1.5 interquartile range (upper fence), circles are maximum values above the upper fence.
Figure 3Association of self-reported severity of visual height intolerance (vHI) and the newly developed vHI severity score. Diamonds indicate mean scores, whiskers display the maximum and minimum observations below and above the 1.5 interquartile range (upper fence), circles are maximum values above the upper fence. The figure shows how subjects cannot reliably differentiate between “very strong” and “quite strong” or between “not strong” and “somewhat strong.”