Abstract

As much cross-cultural anxiety work has focused on ensuring only the semantic equivalence of questionnaires in different languages, this study examines the response characteristics of South African Indians to an anxiety instrument tentatively constructed for this population. Results show that the scale has a fairly high degree of internal consistency, and that certain items were regularly reported to be frequently experienced. Factor analysis of the 26 items reveals a cognitive distress factor, and a possible distinction within the physiological/physical dimension between somatic distress and elevated activity.

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