• Türkçe
    • English
  • English 
    • Türkçe
    • English
  • Login
View Item 
  •   DSpace@MEF
  • Fakülteler
  • İktisadi İdari ve Sosyal Bilimler Fakültesi
  • Psikoloji | Psychology
  • İİSBF, PB, Makale Koleksiyonu
  • View Item
  •   DSpace@MEF
  • Fakülteler
  • İktisadi İdari ve Sosyal Bilimler Fakültesi
  • Psikoloji | Psychology
  • İİSBF, PB, Makale Koleksiyonu
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Advanced Search

The age of anxiety? It depends where you look: changes in STAI trait anxiety, 1970-2010

Thumbnail

View/Open

Yazar Sürümü (344.6Kb)
Yayıncı Sürümü (897.4Kb)

Access

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Date

2016

Author

Booth, Robert William
Leader, Tirza I.
Sharma, Dinkar

Metadata

Show full item record

Citation

Booth, R. W., Sharma, D., & Leader, T. I. (2016). The age of anxiety? it depends where you look: Changes in STAI trait anxiety, 1970–2010. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 51(2), 193-202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-015-1096-0

Abstract

Purpose : Population-level surveys suggest that anxiety has been increasing in several nations, including the USA and UK. We sought to verify the apparent anxiety increases by looking for systematic changes in mean anxiety questionnaire scores from research publications. Methods : We analyzed all available mean State–Trait Anxiety Inventory scores published between 1970 and 2010. We collected 1703 samples, representing more than 205,000 participants from 57 nations. Results : Results showed a significant anxiety increase worldwide, but the pattern was less clear in many individual nations. Our analyses suggest that any increase in anxiety in the USA and Canada may be limited to students, anxiety has decreased in the UK, and has remained stable in Australia. Conclusions : Although anxiety may have increased worldwide, it might not be increasing as dramatically as previously thought, except in specific populations, such as North American students. Our results seem to contradict survey results from the USA and UK in particular. We do not claim that our results are more reliable than those of large population surveys. However, we do suggest that mental health surveys and other governmental sources of disorder prevalence data may be partially biased by changing attitudes toward mental health: if respondents are more aware and less ashamed of their anxiety, they are more likely to report it to survey takers. Analyses such as ours provide a useful means of double-checking apparent trends in large population surveys.

Volume

51

Issue

2

URI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00127-015-1096-0
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11779/94

Collections

  • Araştırma Çıktıları, PubMed Koleksiyonu [72]
  • Araştırma Çıktıları, Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu [455]
  • Araştırma Çıktıları, WOS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu [482]
  • İİSBF, PB, Makale Koleksiyonu [49]



DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 




| Instruction | Guide | Contact |

DSpace@MEF

by OpenAIRE

sherpa/romeo

Browse

All of DSpaceCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsInstitution AuthorTitlesORCIDSubjectsTypeLanguageDepartmentCategoryPublisherAccess TypeThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsInstitution AuthorTitlesORCIDSubjectsTypeLanguageDepartmentCategoryPublisherAccess Type

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Google Analytics Statistics

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 


|| Guide|| Instruction || Library || MEF University || OAI-PMH ||

MEF University Library, İstanbul, Turkey
If you find any errors in content please report us

Creative Commons License
MEF University Institutional Repository is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 Unported License..

DSpace@MEF:


DSpace 6.2

tarafından İdeal DSpace hizmetleri çerçevesinde özelleştirilerek kurulmuştur.