4.5 Article

Development and validation of a youth climate anxiety scale for the Youth Development Instrument survey

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/inm.13201

Keywords

adolescent health; climate change; environ mental health; mental health

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This study assessed levels of climate concern among Canadian adolescents using the Youth Development Instrument (YDI) and collaborated with adolescents to adapt an existing climate anxiety scale. The findings showed that most adolescents expressed climate change concern, but a smaller proportion reported experiences of climate anxiety. The study provided evidence of construct validity and reliability for the use of the adapted climate anxiety scale in adolescent populations.
Emerging terms in the literature such as climate anxiety describe heightened concern, fear, and anxiety related to the climate crisis. Recent efforts have attempted to develop and validate scales to measure climate anxiety; however, extant research is largely focused on adults. Consequently, it is unclear whether developed measures are appropriate for adolescent populations, despite disproportionate impacts of the climate crisis experienced by this age group. The purpose of this study was two-fold; first, we aimed to assess levels of climate concern among Canadian adolescents using the Youth Development Instrument (YDI), a population-level youth well-being survey administered in schools with students (ages 15-18). Secondly, we collaborated with adolescents to adapt an existing climate anxiety scale to be included in the YDI survey. We used survey results to validate the adapted scale for use with adolescents and assessed levels of climate anxiety within our sample. In consultation with adolescents, the 13-item Climate Change Anxiety Scale (CCAS) was adapted to create the Climate Change Anxiety Scale - Short-form (CCAS-S) which consists of four-items adapted from the original CCAS. A total of 2306 respondents were included in analyses. Most adolescents reported feeling climate change concern (75.8%). A smaller proportion reported experiences of climate anxiety (48.7%). Confirmatory factor analysis supported a one-factor structure for the CCAS-S, with high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.95) and good model fit with error co-variance. Findings from this study provide construct validity evidence and reliability for the use of the CCAS-S in adolescent populations.

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