Women are twice as likely to suffer from anxiety than men, and women under 35 are the age group most at risk, new research out of the University of Cambridge has found.
Why?
Because women have more to worry about.
The report reviewed 48 previous studies to discover the underlying trends behind the condition. It found the following stats:
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4% of the overall population will suffer from anxiety
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Women and men under age 35 are more likely to experience anxiety than older individuals
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Women are twice as likely to suffer from anxiety than men
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Pregnant women and new mums are more likely to show signs of obsessive compulsive disorder.
“Early adulthood is the period with the highest peak in anxiety,” the report states. “Women are almost twice as likely to be affected as men (female:male ratio of 1.9:1), with sex differences persisting over time and across high and low resource settings. Irrespective of culture, individuals under the age of 35 years are disproportionately affected by anxiety disorders.”
Anxiety is awful and all-encompassing to experience. It can manifest in shortness of breath, the feeling that everything is out of your control, a constant, underlying fear of something is will go terribly wrong, nausea, restlessness, debilitating low energy, muscle tension, sweats, irritability, impatience….
Aside from being awful to experience, anxiety has been linked to wider, long-term health problems like psychological disorders and substance abuse. This, more than anything, is why it’s important to understand the condition.
“Anxiety disorders – defined by excess worry, hyperarousal, and fear that is counterproductive and debilitating – are some of the most common psychiatric conditions in the Western world,” the report states. “Clinical reviews have shown that the presence of an anxiety disorder is a risk factor for the development of other anxiety and mood disorders and substance abuse.”