Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6812429 | Psychiatry Research | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Diagnostic agreement between parents' and children's reports on children's anxiety problems is notoriously poor; however, very few investigations have examined specific predictors of inter-rater agreement on child anxiety diagnoses. This study examined predictors of categories of parent and child diagnostic endorsement on the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for Children-IV. One hundred eight children (ages 7-13) and their parents completed structured diagnostic interviews for non-OCD/PTSD anxiety diagnoses and paper and pencil measures of functioning and impairment in a variety of domains. Parent-child agreement was statistically significant for social phobia and separation anxiety disorder, but was overall poor for all anxiety diagnoses. Externalizing disorder status, family accommodation frequency, and child rated impairment in various domains differentially predicted informant discrepancies for different anxiety disorders. These data are among the first to suggest variables that may explain parent-child concordance.
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Authors
Rebecca J. Hamblin, Alison Salloum, Ross Andel, Joshua M. Nadeau, Nicole M. McBride, Adam B. Lewin, Eric A. Storch,