Trends In Prevalence Of Mental Health Diagnoses Among Youths Appear To Have Differed By Age And Sex During The COVID-19 Pandemic, Data Reveal

MedPage Today (5/23, Firth) reports, “Trends in prevalence of mental health diagnoses among youths differed by age and sex during the COVID-19 pandemic, with female adolescents representing ‘the most vulnerable population,’” investigators concluded after analyzing claims data. In adolescent “girls, the prevalence of anxiety disorders,” attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, “depression, and eating disorders all increased, with the prevalence of diagnosed eating disorders more than doubling, from 0.26% in March 2020 to 0.36% in October 2020 and 0.56% in March 2022,” the data revealed. In spite of the “‘considerably lower’ prevalence of eating disorders in males ages 13 to 18, trends were similar when compared with teen girls: 0.03% in March 2020 to 0.06% in March 2022, the authors said,” but “changes in other mental health diagnoses were not observed for teen boys.” The findings were published online May 22 in a research letter in JAMA Network Open.

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