Objective: To replicate race-related differences in mother and child report
s of child anxiety and to test whether these race-related differences occur
in healthy and chronically ill children seen in stressful and nonstressful
settings.
Method: Using a 2 (Informant: Mother versus Child) x 2 (Race: African versu
s Euro-American) x 2 (Health Status: Healthy versus Chronically III) x 2 (S
etting: Medical/Dental Clinic versus Restaurant) design, we asked 167 (10-
to 18-year-old) children and their mothers completed the State Trait Anxiet
y Inventory for Children.
Results: African American children rated themselves as more anxious than Eu
ro-American children. Mothers reported the opposite: African American mothe
rs described their children as less anxious than Euro-American mothers desc
ribed their children. For state anxiety, the Race x Informant interaction o
ccurred only in the stressful (medical/dental clinic) setting. For trait an
xiety, the Race x Informant interaction was found for chronically ill, but
not healthy, children.
Conclusions: Reports of child anxiety vary by informant, race, child health
status, and setting.