Cross-cultural adaptation and validity of the Spanish fear-avoidance components scale and clinical implications in primary care
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BioMed Central (BMC)
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Background: Pain-related fear-avoidance (FA) is a common problem affecting many patients with painful medical
conditions. As there is great interest in the clinical importance of the relationship between FA and disability, several
questionnaires have been developed to measure FA. The Fear-Avoidance Components Scale (FACS) is a recently
developed patient-reported instrument that addresses critical issues not previously considered in previous FA-
related questionnaires. The original English version of the FACS demonstrated good reliability, internal consistency,
and construct, criterion, and predictive validity. Two factors were determined: General Fear Avoidance and Types of
Activities That are Avoided. The aim of this study was to to translate the FACS into European-style Spanish (FACS-
Sp), and validate its psychometric properties.
Methods: This two-stage psychometric study included 330 subjects with various chronic musculoskeletal pain
disorders. An initial translation and cross-cultural adaptation of the FACS, from English to Spanish, was performed.
Then, critical psychometric properties were analysed, including internal consistency by Cronbach’s α coefficients,
structural validity from the Maximum Likelihood Extraction (MLE), and convergent validity by Pearson correlation
with the Central Sensitization Inventory (CSI).
Results: This study reports for the first time the psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the FACS. Total
scores ranged from 0 to 88 points, with a mean of 30.49 (±17.18). The FACS-Sp showed a high internal consistency
for factor 1 (α = 0.902) and factor 2 (α = 0.88). Factor structure was two-dimensional and supported structural
validity, accounting for 48.75% of the total variance. Convergent validity analysis found a significant Pearson
correlation r = 0.414....
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Cuesta-Vargas, A.I., Neblett, R., Gatchel, R.J. et al. Cross-cultural adaptation and validity of the Spanish fear-avoidance components scale and clinical implications in primary care. BMC Fam Pract 21, 44 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12875-020-01116-x
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