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American Psychological Association, Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1(107), p. 109-117

DOI: 10.1037/0021-843x.107.1.109

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Gender differences in anxiety disorders and anxiety symptoms in adolescents.

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Gender differences in anxiety were examined in a large sample of adolescents that included 1,079 who had never met criteria for any disorder, 95 who had recovered from an anxiety disorder, and 47 who had a current anxiety disorder. Participants were examined on a wide array of psychosocial measures. There was a preponderance of females among current and recovered anxiety disorder cases, but not among those who had never experienced an anxiety disorder. The female preponderance emerges early in life, and retrospective data indicate that at age 6, females are already twice as likely to have experienced an anxiety disorder than are males. Psychosocial variables that were correlated with both anxiety and gender were identified. Statistically controlling for these variables did not eliminate the gender differences in prevalence or anxiety symptom means.