Pandemic Paranoia Scale for Adolescents (PPS-A): an initial psychometric evaluation and prevalence study of adolescents in the United States and United Kingdom
Pandemic Paranoia Scale for Adolescents (PPS-A): an initial psychometric evaluation and prevalence study of adolescents in the United States and United Kingdom
Paranoid thoughts have been reported in 20–30% of adolescents, and preliminary research has shown that paranoia and psychotic-like experiences have increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, previous research has typically used general measures to assess paranoia, rather than those specific to COVID-19, which may overlook particular facets of paranoia related to the pandemic and result in an under-reporting of paranoia prevalence rates during this time. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the psychometric properties of the Pandemic Paranoia Scale for Adolescents (PPS-A), which was adapted from the original scale to be appropriate for younger respondents, and to assess the prevalence of pandemic paranoia among adolescents. Adolescents (N = 462) recruited on Qualtrics from the United States (US) and United Kingdom (UK) completed an online survey consisting of the PPS-A and measures of general paranoia and negative affect. A subset of adolescent’s parents (N = 146) also completed an online survey providing dyadic data. Findings showed that the PPS-A shared the same three factor structure as the adult PPS (i.e., persecutory threat, paranoid conspiracy, and interpersonal mistrust) and across participant nationality, race, gender, and mental health diagnosis. It also demonstrated strong psychometric properties. The overall prevalence rate of pandemic-related paranoia among adolescents was 21% and prevalence rates were higher among US participants than UK participants. This study provides the most comprehensive psychometric evaluation of a pandemic paranoia scale designed for adolescents and highlights the continued prevalence of pandemic paranoia in this age-group nearly two years after COVID-19 began.
Rabasco, Ana
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Browne, Julia
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Kingston, Jessica
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Krkovic, Katarina
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Thompson, Elizabeth
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Ellett, Lyn
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Kunicki, Zachary J.
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Gaudiano, Brandon A.
45587384-0015-496e-abd1-47a488a56cd3
15 July 2024
Rabasco, Ana
ecf06fbd-3cbf-47dd-bce3-da114366a4e3
Browne, Julia
12924f2b-932e-431e-ab10-7880d6cec025
Kingston, Jessica
0a6d15b9-5390-4996-91c9-ef4be2bde1b7
Krkovic, Katarina
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Thompson, Elizabeth
7916d8a4-690d-4202-85cf-93a9e22379a8
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Kunicki, Zachary J.
23e4e4fa-8b80-4542-b742-bbb24aee400a
Gaudiano, Brandon A.
45587384-0015-496e-abd1-47a488a56cd3
Rabasco, Ana, Browne, Julia, Kingston, Jessica, Krkovic, Katarina, Thompson, Elizabeth, Ellett, Lyn, Kunicki, Zachary J. and Gaudiano, Brandon A.
(2024)
Pandemic Paranoia Scale for Adolescents (PPS-A): an initial psychometric evaluation and prevalence study of adolescents in the United States and United Kingdom.
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology.
(doi:10.1007/s10802-024-01228-3).
Abstract
Paranoid thoughts have been reported in 20–30% of adolescents, and preliminary research has shown that paranoia and psychotic-like experiences have increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, previous research has typically used general measures to assess paranoia, rather than those specific to COVID-19, which may overlook particular facets of paranoia related to the pandemic and result in an under-reporting of paranoia prevalence rates during this time. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the psychometric properties of the Pandemic Paranoia Scale for Adolescents (PPS-A), which was adapted from the original scale to be appropriate for younger respondents, and to assess the prevalence of pandemic paranoia among adolescents. Adolescents (N = 462) recruited on Qualtrics from the United States (US) and United Kingdom (UK) completed an online survey consisting of the PPS-A and measures of general paranoia and negative affect. A subset of adolescent’s parents (N = 146) also completed an online survey providing dyadic data. Findings showed that the PPS-A shared the same three factor structure as the adult PPS (i.e., persecutory threat, paranoid conspiracy, and interpersonal mistrust) and across participant nationality, race, gender, and mental health diagnosis. It also demonstrated strong psychometric properties. The overall prevalence rate of pandemic-related paranoia among adolescents was 21% and prevalence rates were higher among US participants than UK participants. This study provides the most comprehensive psychometric evaluation of a pandemic paranoia scale designed for adolescents and highlights the continued prevalence of pandemic paranoia in this age-group nearly two years after COVID-19 began.
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PPS-A Manuscript - Final
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Restricted to Repository staff only until 15 July 2025.
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 July 2024
Published date: 15 July 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 492328
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492328
ISSN: 2730-7174
PURE UUID: 20db649e-c2d9-4278-87cb-5a246e567425
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Date deposited: 24 Jul 2024 16:35
Last modified: 27 Jul 2024 02:04
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Contributors
Author:
Ana Rabasco
Author:
Julia Browne
Author:
Jessica Kingston
Author:
Katarina Krkovic
Author:
Elizabeth Thompson
Author:
Zachary J. Kunicki
Author:
Brandon A. Gaudiano
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