According to researchers from the National Institute of Mental Health, teenagers experiencing excessive fatigue often also have anxiety disorders and suffer from various levels of disability.
Kathleen Merikangas, Ph.D., and colleagues used a nationally representative sample of teens ages 13 to 18 and found that among the 3 percent who reported prolonged fatigue (meaning profound fatigue lasting at least three months), about half of them also had anxiety disorders.
Having both prolonged fatigue and a mood or anxiety disorder proved to be associated with poorer physical and mental health, along with a tendency to use healthcare services compared with having only one of the disorders.
To reach their conclusions, investigators examined data from 10,123 teens who took part in the National Comorbidity Survey Adolescent Supplement. Participants were interviewed using a modified version of the World Health Organization's Composite International Diagnostic Interview.
The data was as follows:
health status of any group.
They were also more likely to report:
The researchers note that prolonged fatigue is linked to a social function in youth and that it can overlap into more severe forms in adulthood, suggesting that there is an opportunity there to prevent those problems by addressing the fatigue in adolescence.
Source: American Journal of Psychiatry
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