Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
909211 Journal of Anxiety Disorders 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Roughly three-quarters of anxious youth in the present sample showed sleep-related problems.•Younger children showed more nighttime wakings and sleep anxiety than older youth.•Older youth experienced greater daytime sleepiness than younger children.•Anxiety sensitivity predicts prolonged sleep onset latency among anxious youth.

Anxiety disorders constitute the most common mental health disturbance experienced by youth. Sleep-related problems (SRPs) are highly prevalent among anxious youth and encompass a variety of problems including nighttime fears, insomnia, and refusal to sleep alone. Given that chronic sleep disturbance is associated with a range of behavioral and physical problems in youth and predicts future psychopathology, it is important to elucidate the nature of SRPs in anxious youth. The present study investigated the relationship between sleep problems and anxiety sensitivity in a sample of 101 anxious youth, ages 6–17. Heightened anxiety sensitivity significantly predicted prolonged sleep onset latency across the sample, even after accounting for severity of anxiety, depression, and age. Results support previous research indicating that SRPs are common among anxious youth and suggest that anxiety sensitivity may play a particularly important role in sleep onset latency.

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