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SEPARATION ANXIETY DISORDER Caroline Bacon Define Separation Anxiety Disorder • Separation Anxiety is characterized by an abnormal reactivity to real or imagined separation from an attachment figure resulting in significant interference of daily activities and developmental tasks. • Separation Anxiety Disorder is defined in the DSM-5 as the development of excessive fear or anxiety in an individual concerning separation from home or those to whom the individual is attached. Separation Anxiety in Children • Separation Anxiety Disorder most commonly develops in children - beginning as early as 6 to 7 months. • Separation Anxiety Disorder manifests in children when the parent or caregiver leaves for an errand or for work. A child who has separation anxiety disorder experiences such extreme distress when away because he or she is unable to tolerate periods of separation that are expected at his or her age. • Approximately 4-5% of children and adolescents suffer from the disorder.[Robinson, L.] • Sometimes referred to as School Phobia. [MTL Staff] Causes of Separation Anxiety Disorder • The cause of SAD is physically being left by an attachment figure; however, there are risk factors that could increase the likeliness that an individual develop the disorder. [Dryden-Edwards, R.] • SAD risk factors are a combination of genetic and environmental vulnerabilities. • Low socioeconomic status • Families with histories of anxieties • Untrusting, fearful, and/or timid personality • Overprotective parents or lack of parental interaction • Change (moving, switching schools, divorce, death of an attachment figure) Effects/Symptoms of Separation Anxiety Disorder • Refusal to attend school or work and/or sleep alone • Poor school performance • Refusal to be separated from attachment figure • Failure to interact appropriately with other children • Nightmares • Extreme and severe crying • Physical illness (headaches, vomiting) • Violent, emotional temper tantrums [Johnson, S.] Diagnostic Criteria A) Developmentally inappropriate and excessive fear or anxiety concerning separation from those to whom the individual is attached, as evidenced by at least three of the following Recurrent excessive distress when anticipating or experiencing separation from home or from major attachment figures. • Persistent and excessive worry about losing major attachment figures or about possible harm to them, such as illness, injury, disasters, or death. • Persistent and excessive worry about experiencing an untoward event that causes separation from a major attachment figure. Diagnostic Criteria Continued • Persistent reluctance or refusal to go out, away from home, to school, to work, or elsewhere because of fear of separation. • Persistent and excessive fear of or reluctance about being alone or without major attachment figures at home or in other settings. • Persistent reluctance or refusal to sleep away from home or to go to sleep without being near a major attachment figure. • Repeated nightmares involving the theme of separation. Diagnostic Criteria Continued • Repeated complaints of physical symptoms when separation from major attachment figures occurs or is anticipated. B) The fear, anxiety, or avoidance is persistent, lasting at least 4 weeks in children and adolescents and typically 6 months or more in adults. C) The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, academic, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. [5th edition; DSM-5] Quotations from Individuals • “They’re my babies. There’s some Separation Anxiety when they get adopted, but I’m always so glad they find homes.”–Janet Foster • “This we can all bear witness to, living as we do plagued by unremitting anxiety. It becomes more and more imperative that the life of the spirit be avowed as the only firm basis upon which to establish happiness and peace.” – Dalai Lama Journals • Confidence was not equivalent to a low level or absence of fear, but rather to self-confidence that makes public-speaking a reinforcing activity. Likewise, children differ not only in their level of separation anxiety, but also in their degree of security and enjoyment when they are home alone or they go away on a trip without their parents. [Ehrenreich, J. T.] • Childhood SAD may also be associated with a heightened risk for the development of other anxiety and depressive disorders in adolescence and adulthood, such as panic disorder and agoraphobia, though research findings are conflicting. Individuals with current PDA frequently report childhood histories of SAD. Furthermore, biological studies have found similar respiratory physiology among patients with SAD and PDA. [Children’s Separation Anxiety Scale.] Distinctions Between • Separation Anxiety Disorder is more intense than Separation Anxiety. • To be diagnosed with SAD the individual must have reoccurring symptoms. • It is normal for children to experience Separation Anxiety when starting school; however, sometimes if the Separation Anxiety lasts for an extended period of time, it could become SAD. • If the fears last longer than 3 weeks, then an adolescent could be diagnosed with Separation Anxiety Disorder. [Dryden-Edwards, R.] Separation Anxiety in Twins • Twins are more likely to develop SAD because their individuality and uniqueness as individuals is at times a challenge. • In some instances the twins will develop a dependency on each other rather than the caregiver. • The Separation Anxiety Disorder between the twins is thought to be a proxy (a figure that can be used to represent the value of something in a calculation) for the anxiety they feel for the separation with a parent/caregiver. [MTL Staff] Treatment for SAD • Types of psychotherapy (specifically cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy) are most common in treating SAD. The earlier the intervention, the more likely for success. • A form of “play” therapy is ideal to treat SAD in younger children. • Family therapy may sometimes be appropriate to solve the family problems that are causing the Separation Anxiety Disorder to occur in the child. • Sometimes systematic desensitizing to separation could be used or relaxation techniques. [Ponton, L.]