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A multi‐centric study on validation of the Fear Scale for COVID‐19 in five Arabic speaking countries

Background The Eight‐item Fear Scale is a unidimensional scale evaluating the perceived feelings of fear associated with the thought of the coronavirus. Aim The Arabic version of this scale did not exist; hence, this study aimed to translate and evaluate the psychometric properties of the Fear Scale...

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Published in:Brain and Behavior 2021-11, Vol.11 (11), p.e2375-n/a
Main Authors: Deek, Hiba, El Nayal, Mayssah, Alabdulwahhab, Khalid, Ahmad, Mohammad, Shaik, Riyaz, Alzahrani, Meshari, Elmahdi, Iman, Youssef, Naglaa, Alboraie, Mohamed, Fong, Daniel YT, Choi, Edmond Pui Hang, Chan, Bobo Kai Yin, Omar, Nagla
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container_title Brain and Behavior
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creator Deek, Hiba
El Nayal, Mayssah
Alabdulwahhab, Khalid
Ahmad, Mohammad
Shaik, Riyaz
Alzahrani, Meshari
Elmahdi, Iman
Youssef, Naglaa
Alboraie, Mohamed
Fong, Daniel YT
Choi, Edmond Pui Hang
Chan, Bobo Kai Yin
Omar, Nagla
description Background The Eight‐item Fear Scale is a unidimensional scale evaluating the perceived feelings of fear associated with the thought of the coronavirus. Aim The Arabic version of this scale did not exist; hence, this study aimed to translate and evaluate the psychometric properties of the Fear Scale in participants aged 18 years and above in five Arabic countries: Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan by using a cross‐sectional survey design. Method The English version of the COVID‐19 Fear Scale was translated into Arabic following the guidelines and disseminated through social media. Factorial and convergent validity and internal reliability were evaluated. Results: The total number of participants was 2783; the majority was young (41.9%) and female (60.5%). Fear scores were moderate in four countries and severe in Egypt. The scale showed good structural validity, with the items explaining up to 70% of the variance. The scale items correlated significantly with the total scores, and the Cronbach alpha was above 0.9. Conclusion The study concluded that the Arabic Fear Scale is a psychometrically robust scale that can be used to evaluate the perceived feelings of fear with the thought of the coronavirus or pandemic in general. (1) This study aimed to translate and evaluate the psychometric properties of the Fear Scale in above 18 years Arabic speakers’ residents in five Arabic countries: Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia and Sudan. (2) It used a cross‐sectional survey design, the English version of COVID‐19 Fear Scale was translated in Arabic following the guidelines and disseminated through social media. Structural and Criterion validity, internal consistency, and reliability were evaluated. (3) The study concluded that evaluating fear in the Arabic countries was found to be essential considering the high scores.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/brb3.2375
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Aim The Arabic version of this scale did not exist; hence, this study aimed to translate and evaluate the psychometric properties of the Fear Scale in participants aged 18 years and above in five Arabic countries: Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan by using a cross‐sectional survey design. Method The English version of the COVID‐19 Fear Scale was translated into Arabic following the guidelines and disseminated through social media. Factorial and convergent validity and internal reliability were evaluated. Results: The total number of participants was 2783; the majority was young (41.9%) and female (60.5%). Fear scores were moderate in four countries and severe in Egypt. The scale showed good structural validity, with the items explaining up to 70% of the variance. The scale items correlated significantly with the total scores, and the Cronbach alpha was above 0.9. Conclusion The study concluded that the Arabic Fear Scale is a psychometrically robust scale that can be used to evaluate the perceived feelings of fear with the thought of the coronavirus or pandemic in general. (1) This study aimed to translate and evaluate the psychometric properties of the Fear Scale in above 18 years Arabic speakers’ residents in five Arabic countries: Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia and Sudan. (2) It used a cross‐sectional survey design, the English version of COVID‐19 Fear Scale was translated in Arabic following the guidelines and disseminated through social media. Structural and Criterion validity, internal consistency, and reliability were evaluated. 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Aim The Arabic version of this scale did not exist; hence, this study aimed to translate and evaluate the psychometric properties of the Fear Scale in participants aged 18 years and above in five Arabic countries: Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan by using a cross‐sectional survey design. Method The English version of the COVID‐19 Fear Scale was translated into Arabic following the guidelines and disseminated through social media. Factorial and convergent validity and internal reliability were evaluated. Results: The total number of participants was 2783; the majority was young (41.9%) and female (60.5%). Fear scores were moderate in four countries and severe in Egypt. The scale showed good structural validity, with the items explaining up to 70% of the variance. The scale items correlated significantly with the total scores, and the Cronbach alpha was above 0.9. 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ispartof Brain and Behavior, 2021-11, Vol.11 (11), p.e2375-n/a
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2162-3279
language eng
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source Coronavirus Research Database
subjects Adaptation
Anxiety
Arabic
Arabic language
Community
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
Cross-Sectional Studies
Disease transmission
Fear
Female
Humans
Mental depression
Mortality
Original
Pandemics
psychometrics
Public health
Quantitative psychology
questionnaire
Questionnaires
reliability
Reproducibility of Results
SARS-CoV-2
Social networks
Stress
Surveys and Questionnaires
Swine flu
Validity
title A multi‐centric study on validation of the Fear Scale for COVID‐19 in five Arabic speaking countries
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