The multifaceted consequences and economic costs of child anxiety problems: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Pollard Jack1ORCID,Reardon Tessa2,Williams Chloe2,Creswell Cathy2ORCID,Ford Tamsin3ORCID,Gray Alastair1,Roberts Nia4,Stallard Paul5,Ukoumunne Obioha C.6,Violato Mara1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Health Economics Research Centre Nuffield Department of Population Health University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. Departments of Experimental Psychology and Psychiatry University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. University of Cambridge and Cambridge and Peterborough Foundation Trust Cambridge UK

4. Bodleian Health Care Libraries University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Department of Health University of Bath Bath UK

6. NIHR Applied Research Collaboration South West Peninsula (PenARC) University of Exeter Exeter UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundOver a quarter of people have an anxiety disorder at some point in their life, with many first experiencing difficulties during childhood or adolescence. Despite this, gaps still exist in the current evidence base of the multiple consequences of childhood anxiety problems and their costs.MethodsA systematic review of Medline, PsycINFO, EconLit and the National Health Service Economic Evaluation Database was conducted for longitudinal and economic studies reporting on the association between childhood anxiety problems and at least one individual‐, family‐ or societal‐level outcome or cost. All studies were synthesised narratively. For longitudinal studies, ‘effect direction’ was used as a common metric, with random effects meta‐analysis undertaken where possible.ResultsEighty‐three studies met inclusion criteria and were synthesised narratively. We identified 788 separate analyses from the longitudinal studies, which we grouped into 15 overarching outcome domains. Thirteen of the studies were incorporated into 13 meta‐analyses, which indicated that childhood anxiety disorders were associated with future anxiety, mood, behaviour and substance disorders. Narrative synthesis also suggested associations between anxiety problems and worse physical health, behaviour, self‐harm, eating, relationship, educational, health care, employment, and financial outcomes. ‘Effect direction’ was conflicting in some domains due to a sparse evidence base. Higher economic costs were identified for the child, their families, healthcare providers and wider society, although evidence was limited and only covered short follow‐up periods, up to a maximum of 2 years. Total annual societal costs per anxious child were up to £4040 (2021 GBP).ConclusionsChildhood anxiety problems are associated with impaired outcomes in numerous domains, and considerable economic costs, which highlight the need for cost‐effective interventions and policies to tackle them. More economic evidence is needed to inform models of the long‐term, economic‐related, consequences of childhood anxiety problems.

Funder

Programme Grants for Applied Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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