| Literature DB >> 30460424 |
Brigid Behrens1, Caroline Swetlitz2, Daniel S Pine2, David Pagliaccio3.
Abstract
The Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED) is a measure widely used to assess childhood anxiety based on parent and child report. However, while the SCARED is a reliable, valid, and sensitive measure to screen for pediatric anxiety disorders, informant discrepancy can pose clinical and research challenges. The present study assesses informant discrepancy, measurement invariance, test-retest reliability, and external validity of the SCARED in 1092 anxious and healthy parent-child dyads. Our findings indicate that discrepancy does not vary systematically by the various clinical, demographic, and familial variables examined. There was support for strict measurement invariance, strong test-retest reliability, and adequate external validity with a clinician-rated measure of anxiety. These findings further support the utility of the SCARED in clinical and research settings, but low parent-child agreement highlights the need for further investigation of factors contributing to SCARED informant discrepancy.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Informant discrepancy; Psychometrics; Reliability; SCARED
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30460424 PMCID: PMC7339086 DOI: 10.1007/s10578-018-0854-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ISSN: 0009-398X