reviewPsychological MedicineJul 10, 2012Closed access

Global prevalence of anxiety disorders: a systematic review and meta-regression

Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research · University of Otago · +1 more institution

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

The literature describing the global prevalence of anxiety disorders is highly variable. A systematic review and meta-regression were undertaken to estimate the prevalence of anxiety disorders and to identify factors that may influence these estimates. The findings will inform the new Global Burden of Disease study. Method A systematic review identified prevalence studies of anxiety disorders published between 1980 and 2009. Electronic databases, reference lists, review articles and monographs were searched and experts then contacted to identify missing studies. Substantive and methodological factors associated with inter-study variability were identified through meta-regression analyses and the global prevalence of anxiety disorders was calculated adjusting for study methodology.

Results

The prevalence of anxiety disorders was obtained from 87 studies across 44 countries. Estimates of current prevalence ranged between 0.9% and 28.3% and past-year prevalence between 2.4% and 29.8%. Substantive factors including gender, age, culture, conflict and economic status, and urbanicity accounted for the greatest proportion of variability. Methodological factors in the final multivariate model (prevalence period, number of disorders and diagnostic instrument) explained an additional 13% of variance between studies. The global current prevalence of anxiety disorders adjusted for methodological differences was 7.3% (4.8-10.9%) and ranged from 5.3% (3.5-8.1%) in African cultures to 10.4% (7.0-15.5%) in Euro/Anglo cultures.

Citation impact

1,547
total citations
FWCI
23.39
Percentile
100%
References
64
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Anxiety
  • Meta-analysis
  • Prevalence
  • Systematic review
  • Meta-regression
  • Medicine
  • Anxiety disorder
  • Clinical psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Sustainable cities and communities
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Funding