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Fear of aids: Are there replicable, invariant questionnaire dimensions?

Identifieur interne : 003593 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 003592; suivant : 003594

Fear of aids: Are there replicable, invariant questionnaire dimensions?

Auteurs : Willem A. Arrindell [Pays-Bas] ; Michael W. Ross [Australie] ; K. Robert Bridges [États-Unis] ; Wiljo Van Hout [Pays-Bas] ; Annet Hofman [Pays-Bas] ; Robbert Sanderman [Pays-Bas]

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:B34BD90DF038C885B2AA66BAED0797F90692021B

English descriptors

Abstract

Abstract: To date, there has been only one study (Bouton et al., 1987) that aims specifically at developing a measure for assessing personal concern about acquiring AIDS. In the present study, it was argued that the suitability and/or validity of the Bouton et al. Fear of AIDS Scale should be seriously questioned on conceptual and psychometric grounds. In addition, there are no published studies in which the dimensionality of AIDS fear has been examined. The present investigation was carried out to examine whether fear of AIDS can be shown to emerge as a consistent fear composite in factor analysis of specific AIDS-related fears and whether it can be distinguished from Blood/Injury fears, the latter of which has been established as a complex which possesses both cross-sample and cross-national invariance qualities. The dimensional structure of a 38-item Fear of AIDS Schedule (the acronym FAIDSS being used for describing it) was explored with a sample of 684 American students. Principal components analysis with VARIMAX rotation revealed two separate but related, internally consistent and replicable dimensions of AIDS fear: (I) Fear of AIDS contraction associated with risky sexual behavior, and the fear of the psychological and somatic consequences of having caught the disease, and (II) Fear of exposure to the AIDS virus and other associated viruses through (a) interpersonal, not necessarily sexual, contact with members of risk groups and (b) the subjection to medical procedures. Both components were shown to be invariant across sex. Further analyses pointed to the possibility of using a general (i.e. overall) measure of AIDS fear next to the factorially-derived subscales. On the basis of the patterns of correlations of the fear of AIDS constructs with the conventional Fear Survey Schedule-III and background factors such as sex, age, ethnicity/race, students' major in college and religious preference, it was concluded that, if unjustified overgeneralizations or misleading undergeneralizations are to be avoided, the researcher/clinician should use both the subscales and the general scale conjointly. Evidence in favor of discriminant validity of the fear of AIDS constructs in relation to Blood/Injury fears was obtained. Some implications and recommendations for further study were given.

Url:
DOI: 10.1016/0146-6402(89)90015-5


Affiliations:


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<term>Actual fact</term>
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<term>Agoraphobic fears</term>
<term>Aids</term>
<term>Aids anxiety</term>
<term>Aids cases</term>
<term>Aids contraction</term>
<term>Aids fear</term>
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<term>Aids schedule</term>
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<term>Aids virus subjection</term>
<term>American journal</term>
<term>American students</term>
<term>American students sample</term>
<term>Anxiety disorders</term>
<term>Arrindell</term>
<term>Background data</term>
<term>Background information</term>
<term>Beck depression inventory</term>
<term>Behavioral</term>
<term>Behavioral assessment</term>
<term>Behavioral component</term>
<term>Behaviour</term>
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<term>Berge</term>
<term>Bisexual</term>
<term>Blood infection</term>
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<term>Brotman forstein</term>
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<term>Community psychiatry</term>
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<term>Contracting</term>
<term>Contracting aids</term>
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<term>Correlational patterns</term>
<term>Corresponding figure</term>
<term>Corresponding figures</term>
<term>Dead people</term>
<term>Descriptive statistics</term>
<term>Different aspects</term>
<term>Different partners</term>
<term>Different population samples</term>
<term>Difficulty factors</term>
<term>Dimensional structure</term>
<term>Disease control</term>
<term>Divergent validity</term>
<term>Drug addicts contact</term>
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<term>Empirical study</term>
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<term>Eysenck eysenck</term>
<term>Factor analyses</term>
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<term>Factor loadings</term>
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<term>Factorial invariance</term>
<term>Faidss</term>
<term>Faidss scales</term>
<term>Fair amount</term>
<term>Family members</term>
<term>Fear questionnaire</term>
<term>Fear survey</term>
<term>Fear survey schedule</term>
<term>Female sample</term>
<term>Female students</term>
<term>First author</term>
<term>First factor</term>
<term>Further analyses</term>
<term>Further interest</term>
<term>Further study</term>
<term>Future partner</term>
<term>Future partners</term>
<term>General discussion</term>
<term>General fear</term>
<term>General measure</term>
<term>General scale</term>
<term>Harmless animals fears</term>
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<term>High scores</term>
<term>High values</term>
<term>Higher percentages</term>
<term>Homosexual</term>
<term>Hospital medicine</term>
<term>Hospital workers</term>
<term>Human immunodeficiency virus</term>
<term>Human services</term>
<term>Illness fears</term>
<term>Immune deficiency syndrome</term>
<term>Individual differences</term>
<term>Injection viruses</term>
<term>Internal consistency reliabilities</term>
<term>Interpersonal contact</term>
<term>Intimate contact</term>
<term>Intravenous drug abusers</term>
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<term>Invariance qualities</term>
<term>Irrational fears</term>
<term>Item pool</term>
<term>Item ratings</term>
<term>Item scores</term>
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<term>Kushner</term>
<term>Latter instrument</term>
<term>Liberal arts</term>
<term>Male data</term>
<term>Males females</term>
<term>Meaningful association</term>
<term>Medical procedures</term>
<term>Medium effect size</term>
<term>Mineral sciences</term>
<term>Mineral sciences education engineering health</term>
<term>Minor problem</term>
<term>Misleading undergeneralizations</term>
<term>More concern</term>
<term>Much fear</term>
<term>Original schedule</term>
<term>Ostrow</term>
<term>Other blood</term>
<term>Other hand</term>
<term>Overall measure</term>
<term>Overall scale</term>
<term>Overt actions</term>
<term>Pearsonian type</term>
<term>Personal concern</term>
<term>Personal factor</term>
<term>Phobia</term>
<term>Phobic</term>
<term>Popular press</term>
<term>Present investigation</term>
<term>Present study</term>
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<term>Same time</term>
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<term>Scale items</term>
<term>Scale scores</term>
<term>Scale value</term>
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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: To date, there has been only one study (Bouton et al., 1987) that aims specifically at developing a measure for assessing personal concern about acquiring AIDS. In the present study, it was argued that the suitability and/or validity of the Bouton et al. Fear of AIDS Scale should be seriously questioned on conceptual and psychometric grounds. In addition, there are no published studies in which the dimensionality of AIDS fear has been examined. The present investigation was carried out to examine whether fear of AIDS can be shown to emerge as a consistent fear composite in factor analysis of specific AIDS-related fears and whether it can be distinguished from Blood/Injury fears, the latter of which has been established as a complex which possesses both cross-sample and cross-national invariance qualities. The dimensional structure of a 38-item Fear of AIDS Schedule (the acronym FAIDSS being used for describing it) was explored with a sample of 684 American students. Principal components analysis with VARIMAX rotation revealed two separate but related, internally consistent and replicable dimensions of AIDS fear: (I) Fear of AIDS contraction associated with risky sexual behavior, and the fear of the psychological and somatic consequences of having caught the disease, and (II) Fear of exposure to the AIDS virus and other associated viruses through (a) interpersonal, not necessarily sexual, contact with members of risk groups and (b) the subjection to medical procedures. Both components were shown to be invariant across sex. Further analyses pointed to the possibility of using a general (i.e. overall) measure of AIDS fear next to the factorially-derived subscales. On the basis of the patterns of correlations of the fear of AIDS constructs with the conventional Fear Survey Schedule-III and background factors such as sex, age, ethnicity/race, students' major in college and religious preference, it was concluded that, if unjustified overgeneralizations or misleading undergeneralizations are to be avoided, the researcher/clinician should use both the subscales and the general scale conjointly. Evidence in favor of discriminant validity of the fear of AIDS constructs in relation to Blood/Injury fears was obtained. Some implications and recommendations for further study were given.</div>
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