TY - JOUR
T1 - Social anxiety disorder in adolescents who stutter
T2 - A risk for school refusal
AU - Kikuchi, Yoshikazu
AU - Kenjo, Masamutsu
AU - Yoshida, Eriko
AU - Takahashi, Saburo
AU - Murakami, Daisuke
AU - Yamaguchi, Yumi
AU - Adachi, Kazuo
AU - Sawatsubashi, Motohiro
AU - Taura, Masahiko
AU - Nakagawa, Takashi
AU - Umezaki, Toshiro
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Pediatrics International published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Japan Pediatric Society.
PY - 2023/1/1
Y1 - 2023/1/1
N2 - Background: Stuttering is a childhood-onset fluency disorder. Part of the counseling for middle and high school students with persistent stuttering is related to school refusal. Anxiety disorders are known to contribute to school refusal. However, it is not known whether social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a factor in school refusal among adolescents who stutter. Methods: In our first study, we examined the relationship between school refusal and SAD in 84 middle and high school students who stutter; 26% of the 84 students were in the school refusal group and the remaining 74% were in the school attendance group. The second study examined whether SAD was associated with 10 factors related to speech and stuttering frequency using the Japanese version of the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale for Children and Adolescents to determine the presence of SAD. Of the 84 students in the first study, 40 participated in the second study. Results: The school refusal group of adolescents who stutter had significantly higher rates of SAD than the school attendance group. Fifty percent of adolescents who stutter met the criteria for SAD. Moreover, adolescents who stutter with SAD had significantly higher scores on the items “When speaking in public, do you experience tremors in your limbs?” and “After you stutter, do you have negative thoughts about yourself?” than the adolescents who stutter without SAD. Conclusions: When examining adolescents who stutter, checking for comorbid SAD may lead to better support. Moreover, noticing their repetitive negative thinking, nervousness, and trembling during speech may help to resolve SAD.
AB - Background: Stuttering is a childhood-onset fluency disorder. Part of the counseling for middle and high school students with persistent stuttering is related to school refusal. Anxiety disorders are known to contribute to school refusal. However, it is not known whether social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a factor in school refusal among adolescents who stutter. Methods: In our first study, we examined the relationship between school refusal and SAD in 84 middle and high school students who stutter; 26% of the 84 students were in the school refusal group and the remaining 74% were in the school attendance group. The second study examined whether SAD was associated with 10 factors related to speech and stuttering frequency using the Japanese version of the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale for Children and Adolescents to determine the presence of SAD. Of the 84 students in the first study, 40 participated in the second study. Results: The school refusal group of adolescents who stutter had significantly higher rates of SAD than the school attendance group. Fifty percent of adolescents who stutter met the criteria for SAD. Moreover, adolescents who stutter with SAD had significantly higher scores on the items “When speaking in public, do you experience tremors in your limbs?” and “After you stutter, do you have negative thoughts about yourself?” than the adolescents who stutter without SAD. Conclusions: When examining adolescents who stutter, checking for comorbid SAD may lead to better support. Moreover, noticing their repetitive negative thinking, nervousness, and trembling during speech may help to resolve SAD.
KW - adolescents
KW - school refusal
KW - social anxiety disorder
KW - speech
KW - stuttering
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U2 - 10.1111/ped.15622
DO - 10.1111/ped.15622
M3 - Article
C2 - 37690080
AN - SCOPUS:85170486674
SN - 1328-8067
VL - 65
JO - Pediatrics International
JF - Pediatrics International
IS - 1
M1 - e15622
ER -