Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Screening kids for anxiety is a good thing

- Heidi Stevens Balancing Act Heidi Stevens is a Tribune News Service columnist. You can reach her at heidikstev­ens@gmail. com, find her on Twitter @heidisteve­ns13 or join her Heidi Stevens’ Balancing Act Facebook group.

Children may soon be routinely screened by their pediatrici­ans for anxiety and depression, if the advice of a panel of medical experts takes hold.

For the first time ever, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has called for all children ages 8 to 18 to be screened for anxiety and all children ages 12 to 18 to be screened for depression.

“Developing an anxiety disorder during childhood or adolescenc­e increases the likelihood of a future anxiety disorder (the same disorder or another anxiety disorder) or secondary depression,” the task force writes in the recommenda­tion. (Find the full report at uspreventi­veservices­task force.org.) “These mental health conditions have long-term effects that may include chronic mental and physical or somatic health conditions, psychosoci­al functional impairment, increased risk for substance abuse, and premature mortality.”

The independen­t, allvolunte­er task force doesn’t have regulatory power, but its recommenda­tions carry weight with policymake­rs and clinicians. And with kids’ mental health in crisis — 5.8 million children have been diagnosed with anxiety; 2.7 million with depression; suicide rates in young Black males have increased by 60% since 2017 — the recommenda­tion strikes me as both wise and urgent.

But the best-laid plans of mice and men … you know the saying. And our kids’ psyches have been beaten up plenty over the past few years of school shootings and pandemic losses and climate crises and all the

rest. The last thing they need is a would-be solution gone awry.

I called clinical psychologi­st John Duffy, my podcast partner and a family therapist who specialize­s in teen anxiety, to get his take.

“I breathe a sigh of relief when an agency commits itself to the mental wellbeing of kids,” Duffy said. “It’s a reminder that we haven’t made the youth mental health crisis a blip on our cultural radar — that this is something we’re committing to solving on a deeper-than-usual level.”

And for most kids, Duffy said, the topics of anxiety and depression are already very much on their radar.

“They’re learning about this stuff from each other, from TikTok,” he said. “To pretend they don’t know about anxiety and depression is foolhardy.

So it’s smart to go toward it, instead of pretending it doesn’t exist.”

All that being said, he cautions that clinicians — and parents and other grown-ups in kids’ lives who decide to tackle this topic — should take care to do so from a solutionso­riented approach. Handing kids a questionna­ire and telling them it will help diagnose them as anxious or depressed is not, alone, going to be helpful, Duffy warns. And it may even be harmful.

“Without even hearing the results, some kids are going to think, ‘I can tell my scores are high on all of these questions. I have a problem,’ ” he said. “The inclinatio­n might be to self-diagnose and overidenti­fy, without that being balanced within a larger discussion about what

makes a kid nervous, when they feel most comfortabl­e, how we deal with this stuff most effectivel­y.”

The task force report notes that 76% of primary care physicians believe in the importance of talking to adolescent patients about their mental health, but only 46% said they always ask their patients about it. Increasing those rates is a good thing, Duffy said. But it’s not the only thing.

“The best-case scenario is kids learn, ‘When you’re struggling, here are some tools you can use. You can go talk to the school social worker. You can work on deep breathing. You can download the Calm app. You can get some exercise. You can change your setting, essentiall­y,’ ” he said. “That kids learn this is something you have agency over. You are not powerless

over this.”

The worst-case scenario? “A rush of anxiety diagnoses, where kids are getting medicated and feeling helpless,” Duffy said.

Duffy said he almost always broaches the topic of anxiety with kids by sharing his own experience­s with it.

“I usually tell them, ‘When I was your age I had these panic attacks. Here’s what that was like for me. Describe yours,’ ” he said. “We’re trading stories. We’re in a conversati­on that’s all the way outside the realm of diagnostic.

“We’re figuring out ways to manage anxiety,” he continued, “and sometimes our goal isn’t to get rid of it all. The sweet spot is helping them discover, ‘In different situations, if I’m feeling anxious, that’s not a weakness. I can channel

that. I know what to do with that.’ It’s understand­ing yourself and your emotional states.”

We can’t solve what we don’t see. And better, more frequent screenings will, hopefully, leave a lot of kids (and the people who love them) feeling less alone, less lost, less powerless in the face of some emotions that can be paralyzing when left unchecked.

I like Duffy’s nudge toward hope and healing and emotional intelligen­ce, on our paths to figuring out what our kids, what all kids, need in this moment.

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 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has called for children to be routinely screened by their pediatrici­ans for anxiety and depression.
DREAMSTIME The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has called for children to be routinely screened by their pediatrici­ans for anxiety and depression.

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