Publication | Closed Access
Anxiety Sensitivity Among Anxious Children
79
Citations
18
References
1993
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesTeen AnxietyEducationMental Health InterventionMental HealthChild Mental HealthAnxiety DiagnosesPsychologyComorbid Psychiatric DisorderChild AssessmentChild PsychologyPopulation ChildrenPsychiatryAnxiety SensitivityExternalizing DiagnosesChildren's Mental HealthChild DevelopmentPediatricsMedicineAnxiety DisordersChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
Abstract Employed the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children to show that children diagnosed with an anxiety disorder score significantly higher on the Childhood Anxiety Sensitivity Index (CASI) than nondiagnosed children. Interviews and self-report measures regarding the child were completed by 201 children and their parents from a metropolitan area military community who were participating in a National Institute of Mental Health epidemiological survey. An analysis of variance was used to compare CASI scoring across three groups: children receiving anxiety diagnoses, children receiving externalizing diagnoses but no anxiety diagnosis, and children receiving no diagnoses. Although scoring on the CASI differentiated anxious children from the no-diagnosis control group, it did not differentiate anxious children from those receiving externalizing diagnoses. Implications of the findings for the validity of the CASI, the issue of anxiety sensitivity as a component of some externalizing disorders, and suggestions for further investigation are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1