4.6 Article

FAMILY ACCOMMODATION IN PEDIATRIC ANXIETY DISORDERS

Journal

DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 47-54

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/da.21998

Keywords

family accommodation; anxiety disorders; family members; treatment outcomes; obsessive compulsive disorder; cognitive behavioral therapy

Funding

  1. Messer Anxiety Program at the Yale Child Study Center
  2. John Wiley and Sons
  3. National Institutes of Health
  4. Tourette Syndrome Association
  5. McGraw Hill
  6. Oxford University Press
  7. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH [T32MH018268] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Background Family accommodation has been studied in obsessive compulsive disorder using the Family Accommodation Scale (FAS) and predicts greater symptom severity, more impairment, and poorer treatment outcomes. However, family accommodation has yet to be systematically studied among families of children with other anxiety disorders. We developed the Family Accommodation ScaleAnxiety (FASA) that includes modified questions from the FAS to study accommodation across childhood anxiety disorders. The objectives of this study were to report on the first study of family accommodation across childhood anxiety disorders and to test the utility of the FASA for assessing the phenomenon. Methods Participants were parents (n = 75) of anxious children from two anxiety disorder specialty clinics (n = 50) and a general outpatient clinic (n = 25). Measures included FASA, structured diagnostic interviews, and measures of anxiety and depression. Results Accommodation was highly prevalent across all anxiety disorders and particularly associated with separation anxiety. Most parents reported participation in symptoms and modification of family routines as well as distress resulting from accommodation and undesirable consequences of not accommodating. The FASA displayed good internal consistency and convergent and divergent validity. Accommodation correlated significantly with anxious but not depressive symptoms, when controlling for the association between anxiety and depression. Factor analysis of the FASA pointed to a two-factor solution; one relating to modifications, the other to participation in symptoms. Conclusions Accommodation is common across childhood anxiety disorders and associated with severity of anxiety symptoms. The FASA shows promise as a means of assessing family accommodation in childhood anxiety disorders. Depression and Anxiety 30: 47-54, 2013. (C) 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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