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Clinical Utility of Beck Anxiety Inventory in Clinical and Nonclinical Korean Samples

Authors
Oh, HyeonjuPark, KihoYoon, SeowonKim, YeseulLee, Seung-HwanChoi, Yoon YoungChoi, Kee-Hong
Issue Date
4-12월-2018
Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Keywords
beck anxiety inventory; diagnostic utility; psychometric property; anxiety; evidence-based assessment
Citation
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, v.9
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
Volume
9
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/71243
DOI
10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00666
ISSN
1664-0640
Abstract
Despite the prominent use of the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) in primary healthcare systems, few studies have confirmed its diagnostic utility and psychometric properties in non-Western countries. This study aims to clarify the clinical utility of the BAI as a screening tool for anxiety disorders according to DSM-IV criteria, based on blind recruitment and diagnostic interviews of both clinical and non-clinical participants in the Korean population. A total of 1,157 participants were involved in the final psychometric analysis, which included correlational analysis with other anxiety and depression self-report measures and mean score comparison with the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). ROC analysis and calculation of positive and negative predictive values were conducted to examine diagnostic utility. The BAI was found to have high correlations with depression-related self-report measures (0.747-0.796) and moderate to high correlations with anxiety-related self-report measures (0.518-0.776). The ROC analysis failed to provide cutoff scores with adequate sensitivity and specificity for identifying participants with anxiety disorders (85.0% sensitivity, 88.1% specificity, and 92.8% AUC). The comparison of BAI and BDI mean scores for different diagnostic groups revealed that BAI and BDI scores were higher in the depressive or anxiety disorders group than in the non-clinical group. However, BAI mean score was not higher for the anxiety-only group than the depression-only group. Our data supports the BAI reliability and validity as a tool to measure the severity of general anxiety in clinical and non-clinical populations; however, it fails to capture the unique characteristics of anxiety disorders that distinguish them from depressive disorders. Further clinical implications of the BAI based on these results and some limitations of the study are discussed.
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