Publication: Anxiety symptoms and disorders during the COVID-19 pandemic in children and adolescents: systematic review and meta-analysis
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KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Panchal, Urvashi
Vaquerizo-Serrano, Julio David
Conde-Ghigliazza, Ileana
Marchini, Simone
Pociute, Kamile
Kayan Ocakoğlu, Binay
Sanchez-Roman, Szarah
Ori, Dorottya
Catalan, Ana
Alameda, Luis
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Abstract
Background and Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic and its associated factors have been shown to affect anxiety levels of young people. We meta-analytically assessed the prevalence of anxiety symptoms and anxiety disorders in children and adolescents during the pandemic, and the predictors and moderating factors influencing anxiety. Methods: Multiple databases and registers were searched in this PRISMA and MOOSE-compliant systematic review and meta-analysis (PROSPERO:CRD42021266695) until 27/06/2021. We included individual studies evaluating the prevalence and characteristics of anxiety symptoms or anxiety disorders in children and adolescents (mean age ≤18 years), during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data extraction and quality assessment were carried out by independent authors. Random-effects meta-analyses of the prevalence of anxiety symptoms and anxiety disorders were conducted using Comprehensive Meta-Analysis (CMA) V3. Results: 74 articles (total participant sample=478,882) were included (mean age=13.4 years, 52.3% female). The pooled rate of children and adolescents fulfilling diagnostic criteria for anxiety disorders was 13.0% (95%CI=4.9–30.1); the pooled prevalence of anxiety symptoms was 26.5% (95%CI=20.3–33.9). Anxiety symptoms were significantly more prevalent in females than males (B = 0.103, p<.001), significantly higher during the second wave of COVID-19, following July 2020, than during the first wave, prior to June 2020, (Q= 8.136, p=.017), and during school closure (Q= 8.100, p=.014). Quality of included studies was overall moderate. Conclusions: There is a high prevalence of anxiety symptoms in children and adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially amongst females. This study identifies vulnerable groups, risk, and protective factors, which is crucial to developing clinical practice to prevent further mental health deterioration in young people.
Source
Publisher
Elsevier Espana S.L.U
Subject
Psychiatry
Citation
Has Part
Source
European Journal of Psychiatry
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Edition
DOI
10.1016/j.ejpsy.2023.06.003