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  1. Jun 14, 2024 · The Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) is a self-report assessment tool for rating anxiety levels. It was developed by Aaron T. Beck in 1988 and is composed of a 21-item questionnaire that may help ...

  2. Beck Depression Inventory. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) is widely used to screen for depression and to measure behavioral manifestations and severity of depression. The BDI can be used for ages 13 to 80. The inventory contains 21 self-report items which individuals complete using multiple choice response formats.

  3. Jun 17, 2024 · The Beck Anxiety Inventory was developed in 1988 by Dr. Aaron Beck and some of his colleagues and was consequently published in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. Dr. Dr. Beck was a respected psychiatrist who was also involved in a variety of research studies related to abnormal psychology as well as common mental health ...

  4. Jan 19, 2018 · The Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI; Beck & Steer, 1988) assesses the severity of anxiety symptoms (e.g., fear of losing control) over the last month with 21 self-report items using a Likert scale 0 ...

  5. Beck Anxiety Inventory. Below is a list of common symptoms of anxiety. Please carefully read each item in the list. Indicate how much you have been bothered by that symptom during the past month, including today, by circling the number in the corresponding space in the column next to each symptom. Scoring - Sum each column. Then sum the column ...

  6. This chapter describes and evaluates the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), a 21-item self-report instrument for measuring the severity of anxiety in adolescents and adults. A summary of the research investigating the reliability, internal consistency, test-retest reliability, content validity, construct and convergent validity, discriminant validity, and factorial validity is offered. Sex, age ...

  7. There are 2 subscales within this measure. First, the State Anxiety Scale (S-Anxiety) evaluates the current state of anxiety, asking how respondents feel “right now,” using items that measure subjective feelings of apprehension, tension, nervousness, worry, and activation/arousal of the autonomic nervous system.

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