Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
909256 Journal of Anxiety Disorders 2015 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The GAD-7 factor structure was assessed in White, Hispanic, and Black undergraduates.•The GAD-7 was tested for biases in response pattern across subsamples.•A modified one-factor model exhibited good fit across all subsamples.•Black participants scored lower on the GAD-7 than others with similar symptoms.

The GAD-7 is a popular measure of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) symptoms that has been used across many cultural groups. Existing evidence demonstrates that the prevalence of GAD varies across self-identified ethnic/cultural groups, a phenomenon that some researchers attribute to cross-cultural measurement error rather than to actual differences in rates of GAD. Nonetheless, the effect of culture on factor structure and response patterns to the GAD-7 have not been examined and could result over- or under-estimated GAD-7 scores across different cultural groups. The current investigation assessed the factor structure of the GAD-7 in White/Caucasian, Hispanic, and Black/African American undergraduates and tested for cultural-based biases. A modified one-factor model exhibited good fit across subsamples. Results revealed that Black/African American participants with high GAD symptoms scored lower on the GAD-7 than other participants with similar GAD symptoms. Results highlight the need for culturally sensitive GAD screening tools.

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