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Child anxiety in primary care: Prevalent but untreated
Author(s) -
Chavira Denise A.,
Stein Murray B.,
Bailey Kelly,
Stein Martin T.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
depression and anxiety
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.634
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1520-6394
pISSN - 1091-4269
DOI - 10.1002/da.20039
Subject(s) - anxiety , specific phobia , psychiatry , separation anxiety disorder , anxiety disorder , depression (economics) , generalized anxiety disorder , clinical psychology , psychology , medicine , economics , macroeconomics
We present prevalence and treatment utilization rates for child anxiety disorders in a university‐affiliated primary care clinic. Families were recruited from a pediatric patient list and 714 families participated in an initial study wherein they completed child anxiety questionnaires. According to parent and child self‐report questionnaires ( n =714), 22% and 20% of children, respectively, were above a suggested clinical cutoff on a brief anxiety screen; 19% and 14% of children exceeded clinical cutoffs on a separate social anxiety questionnaire. All families were invited to participate in a second study that included the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for Children‐Parent Version and questions about treatment utilization; telephone interviews with 190 parents showed 1‐year prevalence rates of DSM‐IV child disorders to be 10.0% ( se =2.2%) for specific phobia, 6.8% ( se =1.8%) for social phobia, 3.2% ( se =1.3%) for generalized anxiety disorder, 0.5% ( se =.7%) for selective mutism, 1.6% ( se =.9%) for major depressive disorder, 1.1% ( se =.7%) for dysthymia, and 12.6% ( se =2.4%) for attention deficit–hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Among children with a current anxiety disorder, 31% had received counseling or medication treatment during their lifetime, compared to 40% of children with depression and 79% with ADHD. Adolescent age and being Caucasian were predictors of psychotherapy use; having an ADHD diagnosis was a predictor of both psychotherapy and medication use. The high prevalence of impairing anxiety disorders, in concert with the very low extent of treatment utilization, suggests a need for methods to identify and disseminate empirically validated treatments for these disorders in the primary care setting. Depression and Anxiety 20:155–164, 2004. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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