Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
910230 Journal of Anxiety Disorders 2006 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

The construct of discomfort intolerance (proposed as an individual difference in the ability to tolerate uncomfortable sensations) is introduced and psychometric properties of a measure of this trait are provided. The Discomfort Intolerance Scale (DIS), a self-report measure of discomfort intolerance, was evaluated using a variety of samples (total N approximately 1700), including patients with panic disorder, clinical controls, and nonclinical community members. Factor analyses suggest the DIS contains two factors, including a factor indexing the ability to tolerate discomfort and pain (Factor 1: α = .91), and a factor, which appears to measure avoidance of physical discomfort (Factor 2: α = .72). Cross-time reliability shows good stability across 12 weeks (Factor 1 = .63, Factor 2 = .66). Convergent and discriminant validity coefficients indicated that the DIS performed as expected against established measures of psychopathology. The DIS appears to be a sound measure of a broad individual difference variable tapping the ability to tolerate a variety of uncomfortable sensations and may be relevant to the pathogenesis of anxiety disorders.

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