A Model-Based Cluster Analysis of Social Experiences in Clinically Anxious Youth: Links to Emotional Functioning

Type
Summary

Sixty-four children with a primary diagnosis of separation anxiety disorder, social phobia, and/or generalized anxiety disorder and their parents and teachers participated in a study to examine patterns of social experiences in clinically anxious children. Three patterns of social experience were found in these children: average (no impairment in social functioning), unaware (high parent/teacher reports of social problems but average scores on child self-report measures), and victimized and lonely (children reporting overt loneliness and feeling victimized).

Citation
Suveg, C., Jacob, M. L., Whitehead, M., Jones, A., Kingery, J. N. (2014). A Model-Based Cluster Analysis of Social Experiences in Clinically Anxious Youth: Links to Emotional Functioning. Anxiety, Stress, & Coping: An International Journal, 27, 494-508. doi:10.1080/10615806.2014.890712