Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
901310 | Behavior Therapy | 2013 | 13 Pages |
•Avoidance is theorized to contribute to childhood anxiety disorders•We developed child- and parent-report measures of behavioral avoidance•Both measures demonstrated good psychometric properties•Parent-report predicted changes in child anxiety over a 1-year period•Avoidance decreased with successful treatment
The current report describes 3 studies conducted to develop 8-item child- and parent-report measures to further the understanding of the role of behavioral avoidance in the development, maintenance, and treatment of childhood anxiety disorders. Participants included both clinical (N = 463; ages 8 to 12) and community (N = 421; ages 7 to 18) samples of children and their parents from primarily Caucasian intact families. Follow-up data were collected from 104 families in the community sample. Overall, the measures were internally consistent and related to anxiety, distress, and alternative measures of avoidance in both samples. Parent report of children’s behavioral avoidance evidenced the strongest psychometric properties, differentiated among clinical and community populations, and most importantly, predicted children’s anxiety at least 8 months later over and above initial anxiety ratings. Moreover, decreases in avoidance were associated with successful exposure therapy. These results are consistent with the role of behavioral avoidance in the development of anxiety and provide an efficient tool for assessing the role of avoidance in clinical and research settings.