Author:
Connor Kathryn M.,Davidson Jonathan R. T.,Churchill L. Erik,Sherwood Andrew,Weisler Richard H.,Foa Edna
Abstract
BackgroundOf available self-rated social phobia scales, none assesses the spectrum of fear, avoidance, and physiological symptoms, all of which are clinically important. Because of this limitation, we developed the Social Phobia Inventory (SPIN).AimsTo establish psychometric validation of the SPIN.MethodSubjects from three clinical trials and two control groups were given the 17-item, self-rated SPIN. Validity was assessed against several established measures of social anxiety, global assessments of severity and improvement, and scales assessing physical health and disability.ResultsGood test – retest reliability, internal consistency, convergent and divergent validity were obtained. A SPIN score of 19 distinguished between social phobia subjects and controls. The SPIN was responsive to change in symptoms over time and reflected different responses to active drugs v. placebo. Factorial analysis identified five factors.ConclusionsThe SPIN demonstrates solid psychometric properties and shows promise as a measurement for the screening of, and treatment response to, social phobia.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
1103 articles.
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