The LSAS appears to be a reliable, valid and treatment sensitive measure of social phobia. Further study of the LSAS, both in samples with severe social phobia and in community samples, is needed.
The Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale (BFNE; M. R. Leary, 1983a) is often used to assess fear of negative evaluation, the core feature of social anxiety disorder. However, few studies have examined its psychometric properties in large samples of socially anxious patients. Although the BFNE yields a single total score, confirmatory factor analysis indicated a 2-factor solution to be more appropriate, with the 1st factor consisting of all straightforwardly worded items (BFNE-S) and the 2nd of all reverse-scored items (BFNE-R). Support was obtained for the convergent and discriminant validity of the BFNE and BFNE-S, but not the BFNE-R. These results suggest that standard scoring of the BFNE may not be optimal for patients with social anxiety disorder.
Background: This article presents results of the acute treatment phase of a 2-site study comparing cognitive behavioral group therapy (CBGT) and treatment with the monoamine oxidase inhibitor phenelzine sulfate for social phobia.
Background. The clinical Global Impression Scale (CGI) is commonly used as a primary outcome measure in studies evaluating the efficacy of treatments for anxiety disorders. The current study evaluated the psychometric properties and predictors of clinicians' ratings on an adapted version of the CGI among individuals with social anxiety disorders.
The decision to treat patients with essential tremor (ET) is based primarily on the functional impact of the tremor. Correlates of functional disability, apart from the severity of the tremor itself, have not been studied. The objective of this work was to study correlates of functional disability in ET, and to present data on the extent of functional disability in community-dwelling ET cases. ET cases and age-matched control subjects were ascertained from a tertiary referral center at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and a community in northern Manhattan, N.Y. Subjects underwent a 2.5-hour evaluation, including a tremor disability questionnaire, a videotaped tremor examination rated by a neurologist, a performance-based test of function, quantitative computerized tremor analysis, the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale, and the depression module of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. Seventy-six (85.4%) of 89 cases reported disability on > or =1 item on the disability questionnaire. In multivariate linear regression analyses, current major depression, Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale score, age, and tremor severity were independently correlated with performance-based test scores. Twenty-seven (73.0%) of 37 community cases reported disability on > or =1 (mean = 8.4) item on the questionnaire, and 25 (67.6%) demonstrated moderate or greater difficulty on > or =1 (mean = 4.2) task in a performance-based test. Depression, anxiety, and age, independent of the severity of tremor, were associated with greater functional disability in ET, so that these factors must be considered when assessing the impact of new treatments in ET. Among a group of community-dwelling cases, approximately three-quarters reported disability, suggesting that the number of individuals who might receive some benefit from advances in the treatment of ET is probably a great deal larger than previously thought.
Social anxiety is associated with a distinct pattern of treatment barriers. Treatment access may be improved by building public awareness of locally available services, easing the psychological and financial burden of entering treatment, and increasing health care professionals' awareness of its clinical significance.
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