Cargando…

Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ)

BACKGROUND: Many patients with mental health disorders become increasingly isolated at home due to anxiety about going outside. A cognitive perspective on this difficulty is that threat cognitions lead to the safety-seeking behavioural response of agoraphobic avoidance. AIMS: We sought to develop a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rosebrock, Laina, Lambe, Sinéad, Mulhall, Sophie, Petit, Ariane, Loe, Bao S, Saidel, Simone, Pervez, Maryam, Mitchell, Joanna, Chauhan, Nisha, Prouten, Eloise, Chan, Cindy, Aynsworth, Charlotte, Murphy, Elizabeth, Jones, Julia, Powling, Rosie, Chapman, Kate, Dudley, Robert, Morrison, Anthony, O’Regan, Eileen, Clark, David M, Waite, Felicity, Freeman, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9378026/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35166196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1352465822000030
_version_ 1784768462535524352
author Rosebrock, Laina
Lambe, Sinéad
Mulhall, Sophie
Petit, Ariane
Loe, Bao S
Saidel, Simone
Pervez, Maryam
Mitchell, Joanna
Chauhan, Nisha
Prouten, Eloise
Chan, Cindy
Aynsworth, Charlotte
Murphy, Elizabeth
Jones, Julia
Powling, Rosie
Chapman, Kate
Dudley, Robert
Morrison, Anthony
O’Regan, Eileen
Clark, David M
Waite, Felicity
Freeman, Daniel
author_facet Rosebrock, Laina
Lambe, Sinéad
Mulhall, Sophie
Petit, Ariane
Loe, Bao S
Saidel, Simone
Pervez, Maryam
Mitchell, Joanna
Chauhan, Nisha
Prouten, Eloise
Chan, Cindy
Aynsworth, Charlotte
Murphy, Elizabeth
Jones, Julia
Powling, Rosie
Chapman, Kate
Dudley, Robert
Morrison, Anthony
O’Regan, Eileen
Clark, David M
Waite, Felicity
Freeman, Daniel
author_sort Rosebrock, Laina
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Many patients with mental health disorders become increasingly isolated at home due to anxiety about going outside. A cognitive perspective on this difficulty is that threat cognitions lead to the safety-seeking behavioural response of agoraphobic avoidance. AIMS: We sought to develop a brief questionnaire, suitable for research and clinical practice, to assess a wide range of cognitions likely to lead to agoraphobic avoidance. We also included two additional subscales assessing two types of safety-seeking defensive responses: anxious avoidance and within-situation safety behaviours. METHOD: 198 patients with psychosis and agoraphobic avoidance and 1947 non-clinical individuals completed the item pool and measures of agoraphobic avoidance, generalised anxiety, social anxiety, depression and paranoia. Factor analyses were used to derive the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ). RESULTS: The O-CDQ consists of three subscales: threat cognitions (14 items), anxious avoidance (11 items), and within-situation safety behaviours (8 items). Separate confirmatory factor analyses demonstrated a good model fit for all subscales. The cognitions subscale was significantly associated with agoraphobic avoidance (r = .672, p < .001), social anxiety (r = .617, p < .001), generalized anxiety (r = .746, p < .001), depression (r = .619, p < .001) and paranoia (r = .655, p < .001). Additionally, both the O-CDQ avoidance (r = .867, p < .001) and within-situation safety behaviours (r = .757, p < .001) subscales were highly correlated with agoraphobic avoidance. The O-CDQ demonstrated excellent internal consistency (cognitions Cronbach’s alpha = .93, avoidance Cronbach’s alpha = .94, within-situation Cronbach’s alpha = .93) and test–re-test reliability (cognitions ICC = 0.88, avoidance ICC = 0.92, within-situation ICC = 0.89). CONCLUSIONS: The O-CDQ, consisting of three separate scales, has excellent psychometric properties and may prove a helpful tool for understanding agoraphobic avoidance across mental health disorders.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9378026
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-93780262022-08-18 Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ) Rosebrock, Laina Lambe, Sinéad Mulhall, Sophie Petit, Ariane Loe, Bao S Saidel, Simone Pervez, Maryam Mitchell, Joanna Chauhan, Nisha Prouten, Eloise Chan, Cindy Aynsworth, Charlotte Murphy, Elizabeth Jones, Julia Powling, Rosie Chapman, Kate Dudley, Robert Morrison, Anthony O’Regan, Eileen Clark, David M Waite, Felicity Freeman, Daniel Behav Cogn Psychother Main BACKGROUND: Many patients with mental health disorders become increasingly isolated at home due to anxiety about going outside. A cognitive perspective on this difficulty is that threat cognitions lead to the safety-seeking behavioural response of agoraphobic avoidance. AIMS: We sought to develop a brief questionnaire, suitable for research and clinical practice, to assess a wide range of cognitions likely to lead to agoraphobic avoidance. We also included two additional subscales assessing two types of safety-seeking defensive responses: anxious avoidance and within-situation safety behaviours. METHOD: 198 patients with psychosis and agoraphobic avoidance and 1947 non-clinical individuals completed the item pool and measures of agoraphobic avoidance, generalised anxiety, social anxiety, depression and paranoia. Factor analyses were used to derive the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ). RESULTS: The O-CDQ consists of three subscales: threat cognitions (14 items), anxious avoidance (11 items), and within-situation safety behaviours (8 items). Separate confirmatory factor analyses demonstrated a good model fit for all subscales. The cognitions subscale was significantly associated with agoraphobic avoidance (r = .672, p < .001), social anxiety (r = .617, p < .001), generalized anxiety (r = .746, p < .001), depression (r = .619, p < .001) and paranoia (r = .655, p < .001). Additionally, both the O-CDQ avoidance (r = .867, p < .001) and within-situation safety behaviours (r = .757, p < .001) subscales were highly correlated with agoraphobic avoidance. The O-CDQ demonstrated excellent internal consistency (cognitions Cronbach’s alpha = .93, avoidance Cronbach’s alpha = .94, within-situation Cronbach’s alpha = .93) and test–re-test reliability (cognitions ICC = 0.88, avoidance ICC = 0.92, within-situation ICC = 0.89). CONCLUSIONS: The O-CDQ, consisting of three separate scales, has excellent psychometric properties and may prove a helpful tool for understanding agoraphobic avoidance across mental health disorders. Cambridge University Press 2022-05 2022-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9378026/ /pubmed/35166196 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1352465822000030 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Main
Rosebrock, Laina
Lambe, Sinéad
Mulhall, Sophie
Petit, Ariane
Loe, Bao S
Saidel, Simone
Pervez, Maryam
Mitchell, Joanna
Chauhan, Nisha
Prouten, Eloise
Chan, Cindy
Aynsworth, Charlotte
Murphy, Elizabeth
Jones, Julia
Powling, Rosie
Chapman, Kate
Dudley, Robert
Morrison, Anthony
O’Regan, Eileen
Clark, David M
Waite, Felicity
Freeman, Daniel
Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ)
title Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ)
title_full Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ)
title_fullStr Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ)
title_full_unstemmed Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ)
title_short Understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the Oxford Cognitions and Defences Questionnaire (O-CDQ)
title_sort understanding agoraphobic avoidance: the development of the oxford cognitions and defences questionnaire (o-cdq)
topic Main
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9378026/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35166196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1352465822000030
work_keys_str_mv AT rosebrocklaina understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT lambesinead understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT mulhallsophie understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT petitariane understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT loebaos understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT saidelsimone understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT pervezmaryam understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT mitchelljoanna understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT chauhannisha understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT prouteneloise understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT chancindy understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT aynsworthcharlotte understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT murphyelizabeth understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT jonesjulia understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT powlingrosie understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT chapmankate understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT dudleyrobert understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT morrisonanthony understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT oreganeileen understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT clarkdavidm understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT waitefelicity understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq
AT freemandaniel understandingagoraphobicavoidancethedevelopmentoftheoxfordcognitionsanddefencesquestionnaireocdq