
AbstractAvoidance is considered a hallmark feature of child anxiety, but convenient measures are scarce. This study examined the psychometric properties of the Child Avoidance Measure (CAM) in a Dutch population, focusing mainly on the child-version. We included children 8 to 13 years old from a community sample (n = 63, longitudinal design) and a sample of high-anxious children (n = 92, cross-sectional design). Regarding the child-version, the internal consistencies were acceptable to good with moderate test-retest reliability. The validity analyses showed encouraging results. High-anxious children had higher avoidance scores than children from a community sample. Regarding the parent-version, both the internal consistency and test-retest validity were excellent. Overall, this study confirmed the sound psychometric properties and usefulness of the CAM. Future studies should focus on the psychometric properties of the Dutch CAM in a clinical sample, assess its ecological validity more extensively, and examine more psychometric features of the parent-version.
Male, Surveys and Questionnaires/standards, Psychometrics, Adolescent, Reproducibility of Results, Anxiety, Psychometric properties, Cross-Sectional Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Avoidance, Avoidance Learning, Humans, Original Article, Female, Child Avoidance Measure, Longitudinal Studies, Child, Psychometrics/standards, Netherlands
Male, Surveys and Questionnaires/standards, Psychometrics, Adolescent, Reproducibility of Results, Anxiety, Psychometric properties, Cross-Sectional Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Avoidance, Avoidance Learning, Humans, Original Article, Female, Child Avoidance Measure, Longitudinal Studies, Child, Psychometrics/standards, Netherlands
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