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Using Evaluative Criteria to Review Youth Anxiety Measures, Part I: Self-Report

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Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/15374416.2020.1802736

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  1. National Institute of Mental Health [R01MH119299, R61MH115113]

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The evaluative review of youth self-report measures assessing anxiety and its disorders revealed that most measures were rated as Good across their psychometric properties, indicating high confidence in their use for key assessment functions. Advice and directions for future advancements to the evidence base are also discussed.
Evidence-based assessment serves several critical functions in clinical child psychological science, including being a foundation for evidence-based treatment delivery. In this Evidence Base Update, we provide an evaluative review of the most widely used youth self-report measures assessing anxiety and its disorders. Guided by a set of evaluative criteria (De Los Reyes & Langer, 2018), we rate the measures as Excellent, Good, or Adequate across their psychometric properties (e.g., construct validity). For the eight measures evaluated, most ratings assigned were Good followed by Excellent, and the minority of ratings were Adequate. We view these results overall as positive and encouraging, as they show that these youth anxiety self-report measures can be used with relatively high confidence to accomplish key assessment functions. Recommendations and future directions for further advancements to the evidence base are discussed.

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