Although considerable medical attention has been recently focused on AIDS,
relatively little is known about the amount and nature of anxiety that this
disease may be fostering in segments of society. To better understand the
public's reaction to AIDS, a multidimensional self-report measure of anxiety
experienced about AIDS was developed, the Multidimensional AIDS Anxiety
Questionnaire (MAAQ; Snell & Finney, 1996; Finney & Snell, 1989).
Factor analysis indicated that the MAAQ items correspond to five concepts
concerned with AIDS anxiety: (1) AIDS-related anxiety manifested as
physiological arousal, (2) AIDS-related anxiety manifested as fear, (3)
AIDS-related anxiety manifested as cognitive worry, (4) AIDS-related anxiety
manifested as sexual inhibition, and (5) AIDS-anxiety manifested as discussion
inhibition.
The
Multidimensional AIDS Anxiety Questionnaire (MAAQ) consists of 50 items. In
responding to the MAAQ, individuals are asked to indicate how characteristic
each statement is of them. A 5-point Likert scale is used to collect data on
the subjects' responses, with each item being scored from 0 to 4: Not at all
characteristic of me (A); Slightly characteristic of me (B); Somewhat
characteristic of me (C); Moderately characteristic of me (D); Very
characteristic of me (E). In order to create subscale scores, the items on
each subscale are averaged. Higher scores thus correspond to greater amounts
of each respective type of AIDS-related anxiety.