Does intolerance of uncertainty predict child generalised anxiety? A longitudinal study
Does intolerance of uncertainty predict child generalised anxiety? A longitudinal study
Intolerance of uncertainty (IU) is the tendency to find uncertainty distressing. IU is related to anxiety in adults and youth but it is unclear whether IU plays a maintenance or causal role, particularly across childhood. Our research examined whether: (1) IU is associated with generalised anxiety in preschool-aged children; (2) IU in preschool-aged children is associated with the trajectory of generalised anxiety into middle childhood; and (3) IU is associated with the trajectory of internalising symptoms and externalising symptoms over time. Parents completed questionnaires (child anxiety, IU, internalising and externalising symptoms) about their children at three timepoints when their child was: 3–4 years old (n = 180); 5–7 years old (n = 162); and 8–10 years old (n = 148). Those with higher IU had higher concurrent generalised anxiety, internalising and externalising symptoms at each measurement point. Preschoolers with higher IU, relative to lower IU, had, on average, higher generalised anxiety across childhood. Unexpectedly though, children who were higher in IU as preschoolers were more likely to show a decrease in generalised anxiety over time. These findings indicate that IU is a consistent correlate of generalised anxiety, internalising and externalising symptoms, but that it may not play a causal role in the onset of generalised anxiety in children.
Ryan, Zoe J.
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Rayson, Holly
a92821bc-1ddc-4e3f-9f03-43b453c0b1d5
Morriss, Jayne
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Dodd, Helen F.
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22 March 2025
Ryan, Zoe J.
65d9b325-7da2-4e5d-a795-b5e602f829a7
Rayson, Holly
a92821bc-1ddc-4e3f-9f03-43b453c0b1d5
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Dodd, Helen F.
db72e2f5-f249-4b4e-a54b-addc96f7bc47
Ryan, Zoe J., Rayson, Holly, Morriss, Jayne and Dodd, Helen F.
(2025)
Does intolerance of uncertainty predict child generalised anxiety? A longitudinal study.
Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 112, [103004].
(doi:10.1016/j.janxdis.2025.103004).
Abstract
Intolerance of uncertainty (IU) is the tendency to find uncertainty distressing. IU is related to anxiety in adults and youth but it is unclear whether IU plays a maintenance or causal role, particularly across childhood. Our research examined whether: (1) IU is associated with generalised anxiety in preschool-aged children; (2) IU in preschool-aged children is associated with the trajectory of generalised anxiety into middle childhood; and (3) IU is associated with the trajectory of internalising symptoms and externalising symptoms over time. Parents completed questionnaires (child anxiety, IU, internalising and externalising symptoms) about their children at three timepoints when their child was: 3–4 years old (n = 180); 5–7 years old (n = 162); and 8–10 years old (n = 148). Those with higher IU had higher concurrent generalised anxiety, internalising and externalising symptoms at each measurement point. Preschoolers with higher IU, relative to lower IU, had, on average, higher generalised anxiety across childhood. Unexpectedly though, children who were higher in IU as preschoolers were more likely to show a decrease in generalised anxiety over time. These findings indicate that IU is a consistent correlate of generalised anxiety, internalising and externalising symptoms, but that it may not play a causal role in the onset of generalised anxiety in children.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 March 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2025
Published date: 22 March 2025
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500058
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500058
ISSN: 0887-6185
PURE UUID: 9bb628d5-c031-458f-944f-30232fc1b099
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Date deposited: 14 Apr 2025 16:42
Last modified: 15 Apr 2025 02:30
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Contributors
Author:
Zoe J. Ryan
Author:
Holly Rayson
Author:
Jayne Morriss
Author:
Helen F. Dodd
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