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Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
Brief description:
Children with GAD can worry about anything and everything. Always considering
the "what if?," they go through a multitude questions to try
to predict every possible scenario. They need to know details about
all situations, may be unable to stop themselves from eavesdropping
on adult conversations because they need to know what might be happening.
They will often be looking over your shoulder when you are writing a
check or opening the mail. While this may seem to be a game at times,
where children with GAD try hard to find out the very details that you
are trying to hide from them, in truth the game is no fun. They feel
they need to know this information for fear the family is in dire straits.
Parents of kids with GAD may regret telling their children snippets of information (a neighbor has cancer, a relative lost a job, how lyme disease works) because they quickly turn it into days or weeks of distress about whether this might happen to them. In addition, they think about things long after they have happened (e.g. something they said to a friend which they think may have hurt his feelings). They worry a lot about whether they are good enough at school, sports, or other activities. Sometimes kids with GAD are unwilling to try new activities unless they are sure they will be good enough, or they may quit new activities if things aren't going well without giving themselves a chance to improve on or master the situation. Most times it is really difficult to get them to even try anything new. These kids often have headaches and stomachaches especially on school days, and the school nurse might know them well.
Red Flags:
Many of the following symptoms are present most of the time over a 6 month period and interfere with a child's enjoyment of or participation in normal activities:



