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Kids face different types of anxiety – here's how to identify and address each one

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Parents need to identify the specific fears their kids have before they can get help for them. (PHOTO: Getty Images/Gallo Images)
Parents need to identify the specific fears their kids have before they can get help for them. (PHOTO: Getty Images/Gallo Images)

For some kids the start of the new school year is no big deal. They’re disappointed that the holiday is coming to an end and that it’s time for textbooks and timetables again. Some may even be excited.

Then there are the children who are dreading it. Not just feeling a little nervous about a new teacher, grade or even school, but real anxiety. The kind that has their parents steeling themselves to deal with the tears and sore tummies they know are coming.

The pandemic hasn’t helped matters. Research published in the Journal of American Medicine: Paediatrics states that rates of depression and anxiety in children around the world have doubled since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

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