Anxiety Symptoms
Cross-source consensus on Anxiety Symptoms from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Other
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Highlighted claims
- A GAD-7 score of 10 or higher indicated anxiety symptoms. — Predicting depressive and anxiety symptoms among Lebanese and Syrian adults in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, during concurrent crises: nested cross-sectional study
- Anxiety symptoms were more common among Syrian refugees or migrants than among Lebanese adults. — Predicting depressive and anxiety symptoms among Lebanese and Syrian adults in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, during concurrent crises: nested cross-sectional study
- Among Lebanese adults, 30.9% screened positive for anxiety symptoms. — Predicting depressive and anxiety symptoms among Lebanese and Syrian adults in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, during concurrent crises: nested cross-sectional study
- Among Syrian refugees or migrants, 47.2% screened positive for anxiety symptoms. — Predicting depressive and anxiety symptoms among Lebanese and Syrian adults in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, during concurrent crises: nested cross-sectional study
- The study developed separate prediction models for anxiety symptoms in Lebanese adults and Syrian refugees or migrants. — Predicting depressive and anxiety symptoms among Lebanese and Syrian adults in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, during concurrent crises: nested cross-sectional study
- Anxiety symptoms were measured using the Arabic-validated Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7 scale. — Predicting depressive and anxiety symptoms among Lebanese and Syrian adults in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, during concurrent crises: nested cross-sectional study
- The Syrian anxiety model had lower discrimination than the other models but acceptable calibration. — Predicting depressive and anxiety symptoms among Lebanese and Syrian adults in a suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, during concurrent crises: nested cross-sectional study