Validation of the Children's Separation Anxiety Scale - Parent Version (CSAS-P)

The main objective of this research was to validate the parents' version of the Children's Separation Anxiety Scale (CSAS-P), which assesses separation anxiety symptoms in pre-adolescence, the stage with the highest incidence of anxiety disorder due to separation. In Study 1, 1,089 parents...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in psychology 2022-04, Vol.13, p.783943-783943
Hauptverfasser: Méndez, Xavier, Espada, José P, Ortigosa, Juan M, García-Fernández, José M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The main objective of this research was to validate the parents' version of the Children's Separation Anxiety Scale (CSAS-P), which assesses separation anxiety symptoms in pre-adolescence, the stage with the highest incidence of anxiety disorder due to separation. In Study 1, 1,089 parents, those children aged between 8 and 11 ( = 9.59, = 1.11), 51.7% girls, were selected by random cluster sampling, who completed the CSAS-P to obtain the factorial structure. Exploratory factor analysis identified four related factors: Worry, Opposition, Calm, and Distress, which explained 42.93% of the variance. In Study 2, 3,801 parents, those children aged between 8 and 11 ( = 9.50, = 1.10), 50.2% girls, completed the CSAS-P, and their children completed the Children's Separation Anxiety Scale (CSAS). The four related-factor model from Study 1 was validated by confirmatory factor analysis. The CSAS-P had adequate internal consistency (α = 0.84), temporal stability ( = 0.72), and invariance across children's age and gender and the parent who completed the scale. Age and gender differences were small: older children scored higher on Worry and younger children on Distress; the girls scored higher on all factors. Small differences were also found depending on the parent who completed the scale without finding a clear pattern. Parents scored significantly lower than the child on all four factors of the scale. The results support the reliability and validity of the CSAS-P, an instrument that complements the child's self-report in the framework of the multi-source assessment.
ISSN:1664-1078
1664-1078
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2022.783943