Comparing Parent and Child Self-report Measures of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory in Children and Adolescents with a Chronic Health Condition

Lindsey M Shain, Maryland Pao, Mary V Tipton, Sima Zadeh Bedoya, Sun J Kang, Lisa M Horowitz, Lori Wiener, Lindsey M Shain, Maryland Pao, Mary V Tipton, Sima Zadeh Bedoya, Sun J Kang, Lisa M Horowitz, Lori Wiener

Abstract

Anxiety symptoms in children and adolescents with a chronic health condition have been estimated as high as 40% lifetime prevalence. Clinicians often rely on parent/caregiver information to supplement or substitute child self-report related to pediatric physical and mental health. We developed a caregiver proxy version (STAI-P) for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) State Anxiety Scale that was compared with a child self-report version in 201 parent-child dyads to evaluate its utility in measuring state anxiety in chronically ill youth. For patients aged 7-12, self-reports of state anxiety were moderately associated with parent distress and health provider-reported functional status, but negatively associated with parent STAI-P scores. For patients aged 13-17, self-reports of state anxiety were significantly associated with STAI-P scores, parent distress, and health provider-reported functional status. The STAI-P parent version may be a useful tool in identifying and addressing anxiety symptoms in youth living with a chronic health condition.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00824278.

Keywords: Assessment; Parent–child concordance; State anxiety; State-Trait Anxiety Inventory.

Source: PubMed

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