doi.org/10.1017/cha.2020.56

Article type: Review

PUBLISHED 11 November 2020

Volume 45 Issue 4

What do young people worry about? A systematic review of worry theme measures of teen and preteen individuals

Marcin Owczarek, Grainne McAnee, Donal McAteer and Mark Shevlin

name here
Marcin Owczarek1 ORCID logo

name here
Grainne McAnee2

name here
Donal McAteer1

name here
Mark Shevlin1 *

Affiliations

1 1, Ulster University, Coleraine, Northern Ireland

2 2, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland

Correspondence

* Mark Shevlin

Contributions

Marcin Owczarek -

Grainne McAnee -

Donal McAteer -

Mark Shevlin -

Part of Special Series: Special Issue: Poverty and Child Abusego to url

CITATION: Owczarek M., McAnee G., McAteer D., & Shevlin M. (2020). What do young people worry about? A systematic review of worry theme measures of teen and preteen individuals. Children Australia, 45(4), 2249. doi.org/10.1017/cha.2020.56

download full pdf
https://childrenaustralia.org.au/journal/article/2249
go to url

Abstract

Excessive worry can negatively influence one’s developmental trajectories. In the past 70 years, there have been studies aimed towards documenting and analysing concerns or ‘worries’ of teen and preteen individuals. There have been many quantitative and qualitative approaches established, suggesting different themes of contextual adolescent worry. With the hopes of future clinical utility, it is important to parse through these studies and gather what is currently known about what teens and preteens worry about and what is the state of methods used to gather that knowledge. Studies were searched for using Web of Science, PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus and ScienceDirect databases and selected on systematic criteria. Data regarding the country in which the study took place, participants, methods of collection, worry themes and conclusions and limitations were extracted. Data were synthesised in a narrative fashion. It was concluded that currently available methods of measuring themes of adolescent worry face certain problems. Themes of worry differ substantially between the studies, with the exception of school performance seeing stable high endorsement across cultures and ages. Issues with ordering worry themes and implications for future understanding of adolescent and preadolescent worry are discussed.

This PDF has been produced for your convenience. Always refer to the live site https://childrenaustralia.org.au/journal/article/2249 for the Version of Record.