Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
911269 Journal of Fluency Disorders 2016 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Stuttering is a speech disorder that hampers communication in social situations.•Roughly 22–60% of adults who stutter meet criteria for social anxiety disorder.•No studies have evaluated the rate of anxiety disorders among stuttering children.•Stuttering children demonstrated a significantly higher rate of anxiety disorders.•Of note, 24% of stuttering children met criteria for social anxiety disorder.

PurposeStuttering during adulthood is associated with a heightened rate of anxiety disorders, especially social anxiety disorder. Given the early onset of both anxiety and stuttering, this comorbidity could be present among stuttering children.MethodParticipants were 75 stuttering children 7–12 years and 150 matched non-stuttering control children. Multinomial and binary logistic regression models were used to estimate odds ratios for anxiety disorders, and two-sample t-tests compared scores on measures of anxiety and psycho-social difficulties.ResultsCompared to non-stuttering controls, the stuttering group had six-fold increased odds for social anxiety disorder, seven-fold increased odds for subclinical generalized anxiety disorder, and four-fold increased odds for any anxiety disorder.ConclusionThese results show that, as is the case during adulthood, stuttering during childhood is associated with a significantly heightened rate of anxiety disorders. Future research is needed to determine the impact of those disorders on speech treatment outcomes.

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