Symptoms of Anxiety Disorders in Normal Children

Type
Summary

The present study examined prevalence, expression, and developmental patterns of DSM-III-R anxiety disorder symptoms in 62 never-psychiatrically-ill children. Subclinical phobias and overanxious disorder symptoms were fairly common, while symptoms of other anxiety disorders were less common. Direction of sex and age differences was generally consistent with previous literature, but few reached statistical significance. Nonanxious and subclinically anxious subsamples of never-psychiatrically-ill subjects were compared on individual and family psychopathology. Subclinically anxious children showed greater individual and family psychopathology than nonanxious children, though differences decreased at 12-month follow-up. Anxiety as a normal developmental phenomenon is discussed

Citation
Bell-Dolan, D. J., Last, C. G., & Strauss, C. C. (1990). Symptoms of anxiety disorders in normal children. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 29(5), 759-765.