Abstract

Objective: In clinical structured diagnostic interviews, diagnoses based on parent and child reports have low to moderate agreement. The aims of the present study are (1) to examine diagnostic agreement on anxiety disorders between parents and children on the levels of current and lifetime diagnostic category and diagnoses focusing in particular on diagnostic criteria and (2) to identify parent- and child-related predictors for diagnostic agreement.Method: The sample consisted of 166 parent-child dyads interviewed with the Structured Diagnostic Interview for Mental Disorders in Children (Kinder-DIPS, Schneider et al., 2009). The children (51.8% girls) were between the ages of 7 and 18 years (M = 10.94; SD = 2.22).Results: Overall, parent-child agreement on the diagnostic category of anxiety disorder (k = 0.21; k = 0.22) and the specific anxiety diagnoses (base rate > 10%) of social phobia, specific phobia and separation anxiety disorder (k = 0.24–0.52; k = 0.19–0.43) and corresponding diagnostic criteria (k = 0.22–0.67; k = 0.24–0.41) were low to moderate with the highest agreement on separation anxiety disorder (k > 0.43). Lower maternal depression, and higher social support reported by mother and father were associated with higher parent-child agreement. Maternal depression was indicated as the strongest predictor. Parental sense of competence, parental anxiety, the amount of parent-child interaction and the child's age and gender had no predictive value.Conclusions: Parent-child agreement can be expected to be higher on the level of anxiety criteria compared to specific anxiety diagnoses and diagnostic anxiety category. Psychological strains in the family—especially maternal depression and low social support—lower the parent-child agreement on anxiety symptoms. Child- and relation-related variables (age, gender, amount of time parent(s) and children interact) play no role in the prediction of low parent-child agreement.

Highlights

  • Anxiety disorders are the most common mental health disorders in children and adolescents with a worldwide-pooled prevalence of 6.5% (Polanczyk et al, 2015)

  • On the level of current and lifetime diagnoses, kappa values were low to moderate for separation anxiety disorder (SAD) (k = 0.52; k = 0.43), specific phobia (SP) (k = 0.24; k = 0.19), and social phobia (SoP) (k = 0.25; k = 0.28), indicating the highest agreement for SAD

  • The analysis revealed that maternal Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) scores, r(79) = 0.309, p = 0.01 correlated significantly to the number of disagreement

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Summary

Introduction

Anxiety disorders are the most common mental health disorders in children and adolescents (collectively “children”) with a worldwide-pooled prevalence of 6.5% (Polanczyk et al, 2015). Interviews permit exchange between interviewer and interviewed person and require less literacy in the interviewed person, among other advantages. The assessment of child psychopathology requires diagnostic information from multiple informants to increase the validity and reliability of the assessment (Achenbach, 2006). Studies have shown that children and adolescents report their own emotional or behavioral problems reliably and validly (Arseneault et al, 2005; Luby et al, 2007), parents contribute valuable information of a different kind about the child’s behavior and emotional problems (Achenbach, 2006)

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