CHILDHOOD ANXIETY DISORDERS
Generalized
Anxiety Disorder
If your child has generalized anxiety disorder, or
GAD, he or she will worry excessively about a variety of things such as grades,
family issues, relationships with peers, and performance in sports. Children
with GAD tend to be very hard on themselves and strive for perfection. They may
also seek constant approval or reassurance from others.
Panic
Disorder
Panic disorder is diagnosed if your child suffers at
least two unexpected panic or anxiety attacks—which means they come on suddenly
and for no reason—followed by at least one month of concern over having another
attack, losing control, or "going crazy."
Separation
Anxiety Disorder
Many children experience separation anxiety between 18
months and three years old, when it is normal to feel some anxiety when a
parent leaves the room or goes out of sight. Usually children can be distracted
from these feelings.It’s also common for your child to cry when first being
left at daycare or pre-school, and crying usually subsides after becoming
engaged in the new environment.If your child is slightly older and unable to
leave you or another family member, or takes longer to calm down after you
leave than other children, then the problem could be separation anxiety
disorder, which affects 4 percent of children. This disorder is most common in
kids ages seven to nine.
When separation anxiety disorder occurs, a child
experiences excessive anxiety away from home or when separated from parents or
caregivers. Extreme homesickness and feelings of misery at not being with loved
ones are common.Other symptoms include refusing to go to school, camp, or a
sleepover, and demanding that someone stay with them at bedtime. Children with
separation anxiety commonly worry about bad things happening to their parents
or caregivers or may have a vague sense of something terrible occurring while
they are apart.
Social Anxiety Disorder
Social anxiety disorder, or social phobia, is
characterized by an intense fear of social and performance situations and
activities such as being called on in class or starting a conversation with a
peer. This can significantly impair your child’s school performance and
attendance, as well as his or her ability to socialize with peers and develop
and maintain relationships.
Selective
Mutism
Children who refuse to speak in situations where
talking is expected or necessary, to the extent that their refusal interferes
with school and making friends, may suffer from selective mutism.
Children suffering from selective mutism may stand
motionless and expressionless, turn their heads, chew or twirl hair, avoid eye
contact, or withdraw into a corner to avoid talking.These children can be very
talkative and display normal behaviors at home or in another place where they
feel comfortable. Parents are sometimes surprised to learn from a teacher that
their child refuses to speak at school.The average age of diagnosis is around 5
years old, or around the time a child enters school.
Specific Phobias
A specific phobia is the intense, irrational fear of a
specific object, such as a dog, or a situation, such as flying. Common
childhood phobias include animals, storms, heights, water, blood, the dark, and
medical procedures.
Children will avoid situations or things that they fear,
or endure them with anxious feelings, which can manifest as crying, tantrums,
clinging, avoidance, headaches, and stomachaches. Unlike adults, they do not
usually recognize that their fear is irrational. Obsessive-compulsive disorder
(OCD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are closely related to anxiety
disorders, which some may experience at the same time, along with depression.
Obsessive-Compulsive
Disorder (OCD)
OCD is characterized by unwanted and intrusive
thoughts (obsessions) and feeling compelled to repeatedly perform rituals and
routines (compulsions) to try and ease anxiety. Most children with OCD are
diagnosed around age 10, although the disorder can strike children as young as
two or three. Boys are more likely to develop OCD before puberty, while girls
tend to develop it during adolescence.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Children with posttraumatic stress disorder, or PTSD,
may have intense fear and anxiety, become emotionally numb or easily irritable,
or avoid places, people, or activities after experiencing or witnessing a
traumatic or life-threatening event. Not
every child who experiences or hears about a traumatic event will develop PTSD.
It is normal to be fearful, sad, or apprehensive after such events, and many
children will recover from these feelings in a short time.
Children most at risk for PTSD are those who directly
witnessed a traumatic event, who suffered directly (such as injury or the death
of a parent), had mental health problems before the event, and who lack a
strong support network. Violence at home also increases a child’s risk of
developing PTSD after a traumatic event.
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