Abstract
The present study evaluated treatment outcome differences in anxiety-disordered youth who differed in their disclosure of internal distress as measured in a structured diagnostic interview. One hundred and seventy-one clinic-referred, anxiety-disordered children served as participants. Participants' primary diagnoses were one of three anxiety disorders: separation anxiety, generalized anxiety/overanxious, or social phobia/avoidance. At a pretreatment assessment, children and their parents were interviewed separately using the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule (ADIS) to determine the child's diagnosis. The child's status as a discloser of high distress or discloser of low distress was determined by the parents' endorsement of an anxiety disorder and the child's endorsement or lack of endorsement of an anxiety disorder, respectively. Parents, teachers, and children also completed measures assessing the child's psychopathology (e.g., Revised Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale, Child Behavior Checklist). In general, findings indicated that the level of distress reported by the children moderated treatment outcome. Although both groups benefited from treatment, the children disclosing high distress experienced greater treatment gains than the children disclosing low distress. © 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Original language | American English |
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Journal | Journal of anxiety disorders |
Volume | 19 |
State | Published - Jan 1 2005 |
Keywords
- Anxiety disorders;Child psychotherapy;Cognitive-behavioral therapy;Self-disclosure;Treatment outcome;adolescent;anxiety disorder;article;avoidance behavior;child behavior;controlled study;distress syndrome;female;generalized anxiety disorder;human;interpersonal communication;interview;major clinical study;male;mental disease;parent;patient referral;psychiatric diagnosis;rating scale;school child;separation anxiety;social phobia;teacher;Analysis of Variance;Child;Cognitive Therapy;Humans;Interview
- Psychological;Regression Analysis;Self Disclosure
Disciplines
- Psychology