Validation of the Multidimensional Blood/Injury Phobia Inventory: Evidence for a Unitary Construct |
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Authors: | Amy Wenzel Craig S. Holt |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychology, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, North Dakota;(2) Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa;(3) Department of Psychology, Iowa City Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Iowa City, Iowa |
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Abstract: | The Multidimensional Blood/Injury Phobia Inventory (MBPI) was developed from a theoretical framework to characterize a broad range of feared stimuli and phobic reactions associated with this pathology. The MBPI consists of 40 items that cross 4 types of stimulus content (injections, hospitals, blood, injury), 5 types of phobic responses (fear, avoidance, worry, fainting, disgust), and a self versus other focus. This study reports on administration of the MBPI to 558 undergraduates, 9 of whom had blood/injury phobia. The instrument had a Cronbach's alpha of .91 and demonstrated good concurrent validity, convergent validity, and discriminant validity. One large factor emerged in an unrotated principal components analysis, suggesting that blood/injury phobia is a unitary psychometric construct. Exploratory factor analyses revealed a 6-factor solution defined by stimulus content domains and fainting, each of which may be important to consider clinically when assessing the unique concerns of treatment-seeking individuals. |
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Keywords: | blood/injury phobia self-report scale development factor analysis |
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