Development and validation of the penn state worry questionnaire
β Scribed by T.J. Meyer; M.L. Miller; R.L. Metzger; Thomas D. Borkovec
- Book ID
- 115754704
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 977 KB
- Volume
- 28
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0005-7967
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The present report describes the development of the Penn State Worry Questionnaire to measure the trait of worry. The 16-item instrument emerged from factor analysis of a large number of items and was found to possess high internal consistency and good test-retest reliability. The questionnaire correlates predictably with several psychological measures reasonably related to worry, and does not correlate with other measures more remote to the construct. Responses to the questionnaire are not influenced by social desirability. The measure was found to significantly discriminate college samples (a) who met all, some, or none of the DSM-III-R diagnostic criteria for generalized anxiety disorder and (b) who met criteria for GAD vs posttraumatic stress disorder. Among 34 GAD-diagnosed clinical subjects, the worry questionnaire was found not to correlate with other measures of anxiety or depression, indicating that it is tapping an independent construct with severely anxious individuals, and coping desensitization plus cognitive therapy was found to produce significantly greater reductions in the measure than did a nondirective therapy condition.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this study the psychometric properties of the PSWQ and the WDQ were investigated in a community sample. The PSWQ proved to be unidimensional although the results indicated that the negatively keyed items contributed less to the general factor. Internal reliability of the PSWQ was satisfactory. Co
## Abstract The Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ) is widely regarded as the gold standard selfβreport questionnaire for pathological worry. However, the factorial structure of the scale remains contentious. We sought to determine whether a psychometrically sound brief version of the PSWQ, which