Clarifying Self-Report Measures of Social Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder to Improve Reporting for Autistic Adults.

Xie Yin Chew, Dawn-Joy Leong, Kuan Min Khor, Giles Ming Yee Tan, Ker-Chiah Wei, Iliana Magiati
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We examined whether clarifications aiming to tease out autism-related experiences from social anxiety or OCD in self-report questionnaires would influence autistic and nonautistic participants' ratings.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Two autistic consultants and two experienced clinicians were consulted to develop item clarifications aiming to disentangle autistic from anxiety experiences for two questionnaires: the Social Anxiety Questionnaire (SAQ) and the Padua Inventory (PI) for OCD. Autistic adults (<i>n</i> = 50) and nonautistic university students with higher (<i>n</i> = 81) and lower autistic traits (ATs; <i>n</i> = 104) completed the original questionnaire followed by the clarified questionnaire items online.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>For social anxiety, there were few significant differences between the original and clarified item and total SAQ scores. 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Professionals should therefore clarify the intended meanings of different items of the PI to ensure more accurate and relevant ratings of OCD symptoms in autistic people.</p><p><strong>Lay summary: </strong><b>Why was this study done?:</b> Autistic people and people with higher autistic traits (ATs) often experience higher rates of anxiety. Anxiety measures developed for the general population may not be appropriate or accurate for measuring anxiety in autistic people. We investigated whether clarifying items in existing self-report questionnaires to tease out anxiety from autistic experiences would influence the way autistic adults self-report their social anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) symptoms, and if so in what ways. 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However, the differences were more common and pronounced with the autistic participants.<b>What do these findings add to what was already known?:</b> These findings suggest that original self-report measures of anxiety may need to be clarified so that autistic adults can better capture and rate their anxiety, rather than their autism-related experiences.<b>What are potential weaknesses in the study?:</b> We used only two anxiety questionnaires, so these findings may or may not be applicable to other OCD or social anxiety questionnaires available. Also, the clarifications we provided may not be representative of all autistic people's experiences, and it is possible that there are other and better ways to clarify the items. 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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background: Phenotypic similarities exist between autism-related experiences and anxiety (especially social anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder [OCD]), making it difficult for autistic people to self-report their experiences using existing measures developed for nonautistic adults. We examined whether clarifications aiming to tease out autism-related experiences from social anxiety or OCD in self-report questionnaires would influence autistic and nonautistic participants' ratings.

Methods: Two autistic consultants and two experienced clinicians were consulted to develop item clarifications aiming to disentangle autistic from anxiety experiences for two questionnaires: the Social Anxiety Questionnaire (SAQ) and the Padua Inventory (PI) for OCD. Autistic adults (n = 50) and nonautistic university students with higher (n = 81) and lower autistic traits (ATs; n = 104) completed the original questionnaire followed by the clarified questionnaire items online.

Results: For social anxiety, there were few significant differences between the original and clarified item and total SAQ scores. For OCD, participants reported significantly lower scores for the OCD-clarified PI items than for the original items and the autism-clarified items. Larger original-clarified PI mean item differences were noted in items describing repetitive behaviors, "obsessional" thoughts, and contamination fears. Similar patterns of differences were found in autistic and nonautistic participants with higher and lower ATs, but differences were often larger in the autistic group.

Conclusion: The SAQ in its original form appears to be an appropriate measure for autistic people to self-report social anxiety. However, autistic people appeared to complete the original PI items to reflect, to some extent, their autism-related experiences, rather than the originally intended OCD symptoms. Thus, the original OCD self-report ratings were inflated using the PI. Professionals should therefore clarify the intended meanings of different items of the PI to ensure more accurate and relevant ratings of OCD symptoms in autistic people.

Lay summary: Why was this study done?: Autistic people and people with higher autistic traits (ATs) often experience higher rates of anxiety. Anxiety measures developed for the general population may not be appropriate or accurate for measuring anxiety in autistic people. We investigated whether clarifying items in existing self-report questionnaires to tease out anxiety from autistic experiences would influence the way autistic adults self-report their social anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) symptoms, and if so in what ways. We also wanted to know whether providing these item clarifications would affect the ratings of nonautistic individuals with varying rates of ATs to the same extent.What did the researchers do?: We initially consulted two autistic adults and two clinicians with experience working with autistic adults and co-occurring mental health difficulties. We selected two measures: the Social Anxiety Questionnaire (SAQ) for social anxiety symptoms and the Padua Inventory for OCD symptoms. The consultants identified social anxiety and OCD items that could be interpreted or experienced differently by autistic people and proposed ways to clarify them to make their meaning clearer.Next, 50 autistic people and 185 nonautistic university students participated in our online study. The nonautistic participants were grouped into those with higher or lower ATs. Participants completed the original social anxiety and OCD questionnaires first, followed by the clarified versions of the two questionnaires.What were the results of the study?: For social anxiety, we only found small differences in ratings when participants used measures with or without clarifications. This was true in both autistic and nonautistic participants. For OCD symptoms, autistic people's OCD ratings were significantly lower for many items after we provided clarifications, especially for items describing repetitive behaviors, "obsessional" thoughts, and contamination fears. This finding suggests that in the original questionnaire, autistic people may have also been rating their autism-related experiences, not just the OCD experiences or symptoms the questionnaire was trying to measure. We found similar differences between the original and clarified item ratings in nonautistic participants with higher and lower ATs. However, the differences were more common and pronounced with the autistic participants.What do these findings add to what was already known?: These findings suggest that original self-report measures of anxiety may need to be clarified so that autistic adults can better capture and rate their anxiety, rather than their autism-related experiences.What are potential weaknesses in the study?: We used only two anxiety questionnaires, so these findings may or may not be applicable to other OCD or social anxiety questionnaires available. Also, the clarifications we provided may not be representative of all autistic people's experiences, and it is possible that there are other and better ways to clarify the items. We also conducted many item comparisons in this study, so there is a possibility that some findings were due to chance.How will these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?: Our findings can help improve clinical interviews and use of anxiety questionnaires by making them more accurate. They can also help clinicians appreciate the importance of asking clarifying questions to ensure they better capture autistic adults' anxiety experiences.

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澄清社交焦虑和强迫症的自我报告测量,以改善自闭症成人的报告。
背景:自闭症相关经历与焦虑(尤其是社交焦虑和强迫症[OCD])之间存在表型相似性,这使得自闭症患者很难使用现有的针对非自闭症成年人的测量方法来自我报告他们的经历。我们研究了在自我报告问卷中从社交焦虑或强迫症中梳理出自闭症相关经历的澄清是否会影响自闭症和非自闭症参与者的评分。方法:通过咨询2名自闭症咨询师和2名经验丰富的临床医生,对社交焦虑问卷(SAQ)和强迫症帕多瓦量表(PI)两份问卷进行项目澄清,旨在帮助自闭症患者摆脱焦虑体验。自闭症成人(n = 50)和非自闭症大学生(n = 81)具有较高和较低的自闭症特征(ATs;N = 104)先完成原始问卷,然后在线完成澄清后的问卷项目。结果:在社交焦虑方面,原题与澄清题与总分之间差异不显著。对于OCD,参与者报告的OCD澄清PI项目的得分明显低于原始项目和自闭症澄清项目。在描述重复行为、“强迫性”思想和污染恐惧的项目中,更大的原始澄清PI平均项目差异被注意到。在自闭症和非自闭症参与者中也发现了类似的差异模式,但自闭症组的差异通常更大。结论:原始形式的SAQ似乎是自闭症患者自我报告社交焦虑的合适方法。然而,自闭症患者完成最初的PI项目似乎在一定程度上反映了他们与自闭症相关的经历,而不是最初预期的强迫症症状。因此,原始的强迫症自我报告等级被PI夸大了。因此,专业人员应澄清个人情感指数不同项目的预期含义,以确保对自闭症患者的强迫症症状进行更准确和相关的评分。Lay summary:为什么要做这项研究?自闭症患者和具有更高自闭症特征的人通常会经历更高的焦虑率。为一般人群开发的焦虑测量方法可能不适合或不准确地测量自闭症患者的焦虑。我们调查了澄清现有自我报告问卷中的条目以梳理自闭症经历中的焦虑是否会影响自闭症成年人自我报告其社交焦虑和强迫症(OCD)症状的方式,如果会的话,会以何种方式影响。我们还想知道,提供这些项目的澄清是否会在相同程度上影响具有不同at率的非自闭症个体的评分。研究人员做了什么?我们最初咨询了两名自闭症成年人和两名具有治疗自闭症成年人和同时出现精神健康问题经验的临床医生。我们选择了两种测量方法:社交焦虑问卷(SAQ)用于社交焦虑症状和帕多瓦量表用于强迫症症状。咨询师确定了社交焦虑和强迫症项目,这些项目可能会被自闭症患者以不同的方式解释或体验,并提出了澄清它们的方法,使它们的含义更清晰。接下来,50名自闭症患者和185名非自闭症大学生参加了我们的在线研究。非自闭症参与者被分为高智商组和低智商组。参与者先完成原始的社交焦虑和强迫症问卷,然后再完成两份问卷的澄清版。研究的结果是什么?对于社交焦虑,我们发现,当参与者使用有或没有澄清的测量方法时,他们的评分只有很小的差异。这在自闭症和非自闭症参与者中都是正确的。对于强迫症症状,在我们提供了解释之后,自闭症患者对许多项目的强迫症评分明显降低,特别是对描述重复行为、“强迫性”想法和污染恐惧的项目。这一发现表明,在最初的问卷中,自闭症患者可能也在评估他们与自闭症相关的经历,而不仅仅是问卷试图测量的强迫症经历或症状。我们发现,在ATs较高和较低的非自闭症参与者中,原始项目和澄清项目评分之间也存在类似的差异。然而,这种差异在自闭症参与者中更为普遍和明显。这些发现对已知的知识有什么补充?这些发现表明,最初的自我报告焦虑测量可能需要澄清,以便自闭症成年人能够更好地捕捉和评估他们的焦虑,而不是他们与自闭症相关的经历。研究中有哪些潜在的弱点?我们只使用了两份焦虑问卷,所以这些发现可能适用于也可能不适用于其他可用的强迫症或社交焦虑问卷。 此外,我们提供的解释可能并不代表所有自闭症患者的经历,可能还有其他更好的方法来解释这些问题。在本研究中我们也进行了很多项目比较,所以有可能有些发现是偶然的。这些发现将如何帮助现在或将来的自闭症成年人?我们的研究结果可以帮助改善临床访谈和焦虑问卷的使用,使其更准确。他们还可以帮助临床医生认识到提出澄清性问题的重要性,以确保他们更好地捕捉自闭症成年人的焦虑经历。
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