Childhood Anxiety
Early Indicators of Childhood Anxiety for Paediatricians
Watch for excessive, persistent, impairing fear or worry out of proportion to age — often presenting somatically (recurrent tummy aches, headaches, sleep disturbance), behaviourally (clinging, avoidance, school refusal, irritability), or cognitively (catastrophic worry). Screen when symptoms persist beyond weeks and impair function across settings.
Anxiety in childhood rarely announces itself as worry — it arrives disguised as tummy aches, clinginess, or a child who simply will not settle.
In short
Watch for excessive, persistent fear or worry that is out of proportion to the situation, hard for the child to control, and impairing across settings — school, home, peers. In younger children it most often presents somatically (recurrent abdominal pain, headaches), behaviourally (clinging, avoidance, refusal), and physiologically (sleep disturbance, restlessness) rather than as verbalised worry. Persistence beyond a few weeks with functional impact warrants screening.Early indicators to watch for
Somatic presentations (frequently the first contact)- Recurrent stomach aches, nausea, headaches with no organic cause, often clustering before school or social events
- Sleep disturbance — difficulty settling, frequent waking, nightmares
- Fatigue, muscle tension, restlessness
Behavioural and emotional
- Excessive distress on separation beyond the developmentally expected age, or escalating school refusal/avoidance
- Marked clinging, reassurance-seeking, or need for routine and predictability
- Avoidance of age-typical activities, social withdrawal, or selective mutism in specific settings
- Irritability, tearfulness, or meltdowns disproportionate to triggers — anxiety in children often looks like "behaviour"
Cognitive
- Persistent catastrophic worry, perfectionism, or fear of making mistakes
- Difficulty concentrating that fluctuates with stressors
When to screen and refer
Developmentally normal fears (strangers, dark, separation in toddlers) are transient and self-limiting. Consider screening when symptoms are excessive for age, persist beyond several weeks, are difficult for the child to control, and impair functioning across more than one setting. Always exclude organic causes for somatic complaints, and screen for co-occurring ADHD features, learning difficulty, or family stressors. Same-week onward referral is warranted where there is significant school refusal, marked functional decline, or any expression of self-harm.The Pinnacle way
Pinnacle Blooms Network supports your referral pathway with structured, multi-domain developmental profiling. The AbilityScore® is a clinician-administered structured assessment that gives an objective baseline and tracks change once support begins — it complements, and never replaces, your clinical judgment. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care. Explore the Childhood Anxiety pathway and behaviour and emotional support for collaborative care.Trusted sources
Aligned with WHO ICD-11 anxiety and fear-related disorders framing, the American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on childhood anxiety, CDC children's mental health resources, and NICE guidance on anxiety in children and young people.Next step — to refer a child or set up a clinical referral partnership with your practice, reach the Pinnacle clinical team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Escalate to same-week referral with significant school refusal, marked functional decline across settings, or any expression of self-harm. Exclude organic causes for recurrent somatic complaints before attributing to anxiety.
Try this at home
High-yield consult check: ask about school mornings, sleep, and unexplained tummy aches. A child who is excessively clingy, avoidant, or seeks constant reassurance — with impact across home and school — warrants screening.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
How do I distinguish normal childhood fears from an anxiety concern?
Developmentally typical fears — separation in toddlers, fear of the dark, stranger wariness — are transient and self-limiting. Consider an anxiety concern when fear or worry is excessive for age, persists beyond several weeks, is hard for the child to control, and impairs functioning across more than one setting.
Why does childhood anxiety often present as physical symptoms?
Younger children frequently lack the language to name worry, so anxiety surfaces physiologically — recurrent abdominal pain, headaches, nausea, sleep disturbance — and behaviourally as clinging, avoidance or irritability. Exclude organic causes, but recurrent unexplained somatic complaints clustering around triggers are a recognised early indicator.
When should I refer rather than monitor?
Refer onward when symptoms persist with functional impact across settings, or sooner — same week — with significant school refusal, marked functional decline, or any expression of self-harm. Persistent parental concern is itself a meaningful indicator.