Catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]

<strong>Background<br></strong> Cognitive therapies are developed on the principle that specific cognitive appraisals are key determinants in the development and maintenance of mental health disorders. It is likely that particular appraisals of the coronavirus pandemic will have ex...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rosebrock, L, Cernis, E, Lambe, S, Waite, F, Rek, S, Petit, A, Ehlers, A, Clark, DM, Freeman, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2021
_version_ 1826310685836967936
author Rosebrock, L
Cernis, E
Lambe, S
Waite, F
Rek, S
Petit, A
Ehlers, A
Clark, DM
Freeman, D
author_facet Rosebrock, L
Cernis, E
Lambe, S
Waite, F
Rek, S
Petit, A
Ehlers, A
Clark, DM
Freeman, D
author_sort Rosebrock, L
collection OXFORD
description <strong>Background<br></strong> Cognitive therapies are developed on the principle that specific cognitive appraisals are key determinants in the development and maintenance of mental health disorders. It is likely that particular appraisals of the coronavirus pandemic will have explanatory power for subsequent mental health outcomes in the general public. To enable testing of this hypothesis we developed a questionnaire assessing coronavirus-related cognitions. <br><strong> Methods<br></strong> 12 285 participants completed online a 46-item pool of cognitions about coronavirus and six measures of different mental health problems. The sample was randomly split into derivation and validation samples. Exploratory factor analyses determined the factor structure, selection of items, and model fit in the derivation sample. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) then tested this model in the validation sample. Associations of the questionnaire with mental health outcomes were examined. <br><strong> Results<br></strong> The 26-item, seven-factor, Oxford Psychological Investigation of Coronavirus Questionnaire [TOPIC-Q] was developed. CFA demonstrated a good model fit (χ2 = 2108.43, df = 278, p < 0.001, comparative fit index (CFI) = 0.950, Tucker−Lewis index (TLI) = 0.942, root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.033, standardized root mean square residual (SRMR) = 0.038). The factors were: cognitions about (1) safety and vulnerability, (2) negative long-term impact, (3) having the virus, (4) spreading the virus, (5) social judgment, (6) negative self, and (7) being targeted. The questionnaire explained significant variance in depression (45.8%), social anxiety (37.3%), agoraphobia (23.2%), paranoia (27.3%), post-traumatic stress disorder (57.1%), and panic disorder (31.4%). Cognitions about negative long-term impact had the greatest explanatory power across disorders. <br><strong> Conclusions<br></strong> TOPIC-Q provides a method to assess appraisals of the pandemic, which is likely to prove helpful both in longitudinal studies assessing mental health outcomes and in delivery of psychological therapy.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:57:06Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:29ec0d0a-b67a-40aa-ad8f-376ba543c5ff
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:57:06Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:29ec0d0a-b67a-40aa-ad8f-376ba543c5ff2023-08-25T09:34:19ZCatastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:29ec0d0a-b67a-40aa-ad8f-376ba543c5ffEnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press2021Rosebrock, LCernis, ELambe, SWaite, FRek, SPetit, AEhlers, AClark, DMFreeman, D<strong>Background<br></strong> Cognitive therapies are developed on the principle that specific cognitive appraisals are key determinants in the development and maintenance of mental health disorders. It is likely that particular appraisals of the coronavirus pandemic will have explanatory power for subsequent mental health outcomes in the general public. To enable testing of this hypothesis we developed a questionnaire assessing coronavirus-related cognitions. <br><strong> Methods<br></strong> 12 285 participants completed online a 46-item pool of cognitions about coronavirus and six measures of different mental health problems. The sample was randomly split into derivation and validation samples. Exploratory factor analyses determined the factor structure, selection of items, and model fit in the derivation sample. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) then tested this model in the validation sample. Associations of the questionnaire with mental health outcomes were examined. <br><strong> Results<br></strong> The 26-item, seven-factor, Oxford Psychological Investigation of Coronavirus Questionnaire [TOPIC-Q] was developed. CFA demonstrated a good model fit (χ2 = 2108.43, df = 278, p < 0.001, comparative fit index (CFI) = 0.950, Tucker−Lewis index (TLI) = 0.942, root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.033, standardized root mean square residual (SRMR) = 0.038). The factors were: cognitions about (1) safety and vulnerability, (2) negative long-term impact, (3) having the virus, (4) spreading the virus, (5) social judgment, (6) negative self, and (7) being targeted. The questionnaire explained significant variance in depression (45.8%), social anxiety (37.3%), agoraphobia (23.2%), paranoia (27.3%), post-traumatic stress disorder (57.1%), and panic disorder (31.4%). Cognitions about negative long-term impact had the greatest explanatory power across disorders. <br><strong> Conclusions<br></strong> TOPIC-Q provides a method to assess appraisals of the pandemic, which is likely to prove helpful both in longitudinal studies assessing mental health outcomes and in delivery of psychological therapy.
spellingShingle Rosebrock, L
Cernis, E
Lambe, S
Waite, F
Rek, S
Petit, A
Ehlers, A
Clark, DM
Freeman, D
Catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]
title Catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]
title_full Catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]
title_fullStr Catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]
title_full_unstemmed Catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]
title_short Catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus: the Oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire [TOPIC-Q]
title_sort catastrophic cognitions about coronavirus the oxford psychological investigation of coronavirus questionnaire topic q
work_keys_str_mv AT rosebrockl catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT cernise catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT lambes catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT waitef catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT reks catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT petita catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT ehlersa catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT clarkdm catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq
AT freemand catastrophiccognitionsaboutcoronavirustheoxfordpsychologicalinvestigationofcoronavirusquestionnairetopicq