The British Journal of Psychiatry 128: 80-85 (1976)
© 1976 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
The outcome of adolescent school phobia
I Berg, A Butler and G Hall
A hundred-and-twenty-five school phobic youngsters had been treated in a
psychiatric in-patient unit for young adolescents of secondary school age
over a seven-year period; a hundred of them were reviewed on average three
years after discharge. About a third of cases were found to have improved
little; they had persistent severe symptoms of emotional disturbance and
continuing social impairment. Another third had improved appreciably and
were affected by neurotic symptoms rather than social impairment. The
remaining third had improved substantially or completely. School attendance
difficulties had remained in about half of all cases. Subsequent
difficulties in going to work were less pronounced. The best predictor of
outcome was clinical state on discharge. High intelligence also emerged as
a significant predictor of poor outcome. Five girls and a boy had already
developed severe and persistent agoraphobic difficulties when reviewed. It
was found that severe school phobia in early adolescence resembled adult
affective disorders in some clinical features and in outcome.