Abstract

To evaluate a 12-week cognitive-behavioral treatment program for children with anxiety disorders and the additional value of a seven-session cognitive parent training program. Seventy-nine children with an anxiety disorder (aged 7-18 years) were randomly assigned to a cognitive behavioral treatment condition or a wait-list control condition. Families in the active treatment condition were randomly assigned to an additional seven-session cognitive parent training program. Semistructured diagnostic interviews were conducted with parents and children separately, before and after treatment and at 3 months follow-up. Questionnaires included child self-reports on anxiety and depression and parent reports on child's anxiety and behavioral problems. Children with anxiety disorders showed more treatment gains from cognitive-behavioral therapy than from a wait-list control condition. These results were substantial and significant in parent measures and with regard to diagnostic status, but not in child self-reports. In the active treatment condition, children improved on self-reported anxiety and depression, as well as on parent reports on their child's anxiety problems. These results were equal for clinically referred and recruited children. Child self-reports decreased to the normal mean, whereas parents reported scores that were lower than before treatment but were still elevated from the normal means. No significant outcome differences were found between families with or without additional parent training. Children with anxiety disorders profited from cognitive-behavioral therapy. Children improved equally whether or not additional parent training was offered.

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