Persona: Suárez Falcón, Juan Carlos
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0000-0001-5230-9868
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Suárez Falcón
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Juan Carlos
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Publicación Psychometric properties of the spanish version of the Valuing Questionnaire in Colombian clinical and nonclinical samples(Wiley, 2022) Ruiz Vegas, Francisco Javier; Segura Vargas, Miguel Ángel; Gil Luciano, Bárbara; Suárez Falcón, Juan CarlosObjective: To examine the psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the Valuing Questionnaire (VQ) in Colombian clinical and nonclinical samples. Method: The VQ was administered to a total sample of 1820 participants, which included undergraduates (N = 762), general population (N = 724), and a clinical sample (N = 334). The questionnaire packages included measures of experiential avoidance, cognitive fusion, mindfulness, life satisfaction, and psychological difficulties. Results: Across the different samples, internal consistency was good (global Cronbach’s alpha of .83 for Progress and .82 for Obstruction). Measurement invariance was found across samples and gender, and the two-factor model obtained a good fit to the data. The latent means of Progress and Obstruction of the clinical sample were lower and higher, respectively, than the latent means of the nonclinical samples. Correlations with other variables were in the expected direction. Conclusion: The Spanish version of the VQ showed good psychometric properties.Publicación Acceptance and commitment therapy in parents of children with cancer at psychosocial risk: A randomized multiple baseline evaluation(Elsevier, 2023) Bautista, Ana B.; Ruiz Vegas, Francisco Javier; Suárez Falcón, Juan CarlosDeveloping and testing psychological interventions for primary caregivers of children with cancer at significant psychosocial risk is still needed. One psychological factor contributing to their emotional distress is repetitive negative thinking (RNT). This study conducted a randomized, multiple-baseline evaluation of the effect of an individual, online, 2-session, RNT-focused ACT intervention in 12 parents. Participants responded to daily measures of emotional symptoms, RNT, and progress in values during baseline, intervention, and the 2-month follow-up. These measures have shown adequate psychometric properties at the individual level in this study. All 12 participants completed the intervention. A Bayesian hierarchical model indicated that most participants showed reductions in emotional symptoms and RNT (10 of 11), and 8 of 12 participants showed increases in valued living. The design-comparable standardized mean difference was computed to estimate the intervention effect overall. The effect sizes were large for all variables (PHQ-4: d = 0.83, 95% CI [0.27, 1.40]; RNTQ-3: d = 0.81, 95% CI [0.34, 1.28]; VQ-3: d = 1.07, 95% CI [0.22, 1.91]). Participants evaluated the intervention as useful at the 2-month follow-up. In conclusion, a brief and online RNT-focused intervention showed promising results in parents of children with cancer at significant psychosocial risk.