The Role of Social Skills in Predicting Treatment-Recovery in Children with a Social Anxiety Disorder

Anke M. Klein*, Juliette M. Liber*, Natasja D.J. van Lang, Catrien Reichart, Maaike Nauta, Brigit M. van Widenfelt, Elisabeth M.W.J. Utens

*Corresponding author voor dit werk

Onderzoeksoutput: ArticleAcademicpeer review

6 Citaten (Scopus)
99 Downloads (Pure)

Samenvatting

The current study investigated the role of social skills and its interaction with social anxiety as predictors of treatment outcome in children with an anxiety disorder either with or without a social anxiety disorder (SoAD). In total, 133 children (aged 8 to 13) with an anxiety disorder received a 10-session cognitive behavioral treatment (FRIENDS program). Pre- to post treatment Reliable Change (RC) and Treatment-Recovery (TR) were assessed from a multi-informant perspective, by including diagnostic information (ADIS C/P), child-reported anxiety symptoms (MASC) and parent-reported internalizing symptoms (CBCL-Int). Social skills were assessed with the parent-rated Social Skills Rating System (assertion, self-control, responsibility). Results showed that 1) parents of children with a SoAD reported significantly less favorable use of assertive and responsible social behavior in their children pre-treatment than parents of children without SoAD, 2) children with higher social skills had a better treatment recovery, and 3) children with anxiety and higher responsible behavior pre-treatment and without a SoAD had a better treatment recovery, but this effect did not show for children with SoAD. In conclusion, better use of social behavior increased the likelihood of treatment recovery but not of reliable change. Further studies on the role of social skills in the treatment of childhood (social) anxiety are needed to investigate the mechanisms by which social skills impact treatment outcome.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)1461–1472
Aantal pagina's12
TijdschriftResearch on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology
Volume49
Vroegere onlinedatum24-jun.-2021
DOI's
StatusPublished - nov.-2021

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