Publication | Closed Access
The Foreign Language Anxiety in a Medical Office Scale: Developing and Validating a Measurement Tool for Spanish-Speaking Individuals
19
Citations
36
References
2011
Year
EthnicityFamily MedicineMultilingualismLatino PopulationsMeasurement ToolMental HealthCross-language PerspectiveMedical Office ScaleLanguage ProficiencyLatino CultureSocial HealthHealth CommunicationLanguage TestingLanguage StudiesPublic HealthForeign Language AnxietyClinical LanguageForeign Language LearningNursingCross-cultural AssessmentMedicineSpanishImmigrant Health
Communication research has been hindered by a lack of validated measures for Latino populations. To develop and validate a foreign language anxiety in a medical office scale (the Foreign Language Anxiety in a Medical Office Scale [FLAMOS]), the authors conducted a survey of low income, primarily Spanish-speaking Latinos (N=100). The scale factored into a unidimensional construct and showed high reliability (α=.92). The Foreign Language Anxiety in a Medical Office Scale also demonstrated convergent and divergent validity compared with other communication anxiety scales (Personal Report of Communication Apprehension-24, Communication Anxiety Inventory, and Recipient Apprehension Test), and predictive validity for acculturation measures (the Short Acculturation Scale for Hispanics). The Foreign Language Anxiety in a Medical Office Scale provides a validated measure for researchers and may help to explain Latino health care communication barriers.
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