Factors Associated with Anxiety-Related Disorders in Children and Adolescents during COVID-19 in Oman: A Cross-Sectional Study

BACKGROUND: Reports from different parts of the world suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic and the resultant lockdown and social distancing measures have heralded unprecedented mental health challenges among children and adolescents. To date, there is a dearth of studies emerging from the Arabian Gulf, where the majority of its population are children and adolescents. The study aims to examine the prevalence of anxiety-related disorders and their covariates among children and adolescents in an Arabian Gulf country, Oman. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional analytic study carried out over two weeks (1st to 15th of August 2020) during the COVID-19 pandemic across Oman. Parents were asked to complete the online survey, which consisted of the parent version of the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders (SCARED-41) scale and questions regarding basic socio-demographic information. Logistic regression was used to identify the contributing variables associated with anxiety-related disorders. RESULTS: A total of 790 children, 33.3% (n=263) fullled the criteria for anxiety-related disorders. Logistic regression analysis suggested that anxiety-related disorders in children were signicantly associated with three demographic variables. The model shows that children with divorced or separated parents were 1.9 times more likely to have anxiety-related disorders than children of married couples (OR=1.93, p=0.035). Children living in families with an income below USD 1,000/month, were 1.8 times more likely to have anxiety-related disorders than a family with an income of USD 4,000/month (OR=1.833, p=0.018). Children in grades 3-6 were 1.8 times more likely to have anxiety-related disorders than those in grades 1-2 (OR=1.79, p=0.024). CONCLUSIONS: Anxiety-related disorders are common among Arabic-speaking Omani children and adolescents. They are more likely to be reported in middle scholastic grade levels and children from families with marital discord and low socioeconomic status. It is not clear whether the presently observed rates of anxiety exceed the prevalence that would have been observed pre-COVID-19 era. More studies are therefore warranted using children and adolescents' self-reported scales.

that echoes the proverb "when elephants ght, it is the grass that suffers", which implies that during periods of family disruption, it is the weak or 'dependant' individuals that typically suffer. Meherali et al. [ 8 ] conducted a systematic review and thematically analyzed the impact of the pandemic on children and adolescents' mental health. The authors concluded that this age group has high-risk factors for poor mental health outcomes that are likely to persist even after lockdown measures are relaxed. The conclusion is consistent with vast empirical data suggesting poor mental health among adults often has roots in childhood adversity [ 9 ].
Orgilés et al. [ 10 ] surveyed 1,143 parents of Italian and Spanish children aged 3 to 18 years old for the emotional impact of the quarantine on children. This study indicated that approximately 86% of the parents noted changes in the functioning of their children during the quarantine, displaying cognitive symptoms as well as having a spectrum of internalizing and externalizing behavior problems. In the UK, Groarke et al. [ 11 ] examined the prevalence of loneliness during the pandemic. The study was conducted among the general population, and the data revealed that the observed prevalence rate of loneliness was more prevalent among the younger age group.
Even before the pandemic, there was evidence to suggest that forced isolation is associated with increased risk factors for poor mental health outcomes. Loades et al. [ 12 ] conducted a systematic review of 63 studies on the impact of forced social isolation on the mental health of children and adolescents. This critical appraisal, which spans from the year 1946 to 2020, suggested that children and adolescents in enforced isolation are likely to manifest higher rates of affective symptoms. Supporting this conclusion, Magson et al.
[ 13 ] reported that adolescents in Australia tend to experience pronounced elevated scores in indices of affective symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic. Of note, this longitudinal study suggests that there is an increment of such distress as adolescents continued to dwell in con nement. In the Chinese population, Zhang et al. [ 14 ] conducted longitudinal studies on the presence of affective symptoms and suicidal behavior among Chinese children and adolescents prior to the COVID-19 outbreak and after the lockdown was lifted. The authors reported poor mental health outcomes persisting after the lockdown. These studies all strongly imply that lockdowns tend to toil on the mental health integrity of younger age. Thus, careful attention to the identi cation and mitigation of poor mental health outcomes during formative years has the potential to reduce many adverse health and social outcomes that have the potential to persist in adulthood [ 9 ].
While there is robust evidence of the COVID-19 pandemic tending to increase loneliness and leading to poor mental health outcomes among children and adolescents in other parts of the world to date [ 12 ], there is a dearth of studies from the Arabian Gulf countries. Arabian Gulf countries such as Oman. In demographic parlance, Oman is currently in the midst of the second stage of demographic transition, implying a high birth rate and predominance of the younger age group. It currently has a pyramidal population structure with a "youth bulge" [ 15 ].
The global pandemic of COVID-19 reached Oman on February 24, 2020, when two cases of COVID-19 were con rmed in the country [ 16 ]. During the time this study was conducted, there were 73,791 positive cases of COVID-19 and approximately 359 deaths due to COVID-19 complications. The spike of cases led to the imposition of nationwide lockdowns. Educational institutions bore the brunt of the fallout of COVID-19. On May 7, 2020, the Ministry of Education decreed to close all educational centers. There was a period when there were intermittent allowances for secondary school students to attend classes, but the increasing number of cases eventually resulted in only 'tele-education' or e-learning being allowed.
This study has been conducted to explore whether the prevailing enforced social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic has adversely impacted the psychological functioning of children and adolescents in Oman, manifesting as anxiety-related disorders. Speci c aims of this study were to examine the prevalence of anxiety-related disorders in this age group, as well as the contributing variables associated with them.
Methodology: PARTICIPANTS This cohort study is part of wider study exploring mental health factors associated with early adversity among children in the GCC with particular reference to Oman, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. The present study report on the cohort from Oman. This is a web-based cross-sectional analytic study, carried out over 2 weeks between the 1 st and 15 th of August, 2020. The present study recruited consenting parents of children and adolescents (aged [8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18]. Oman has two types of educational systems -private and public (or 'governmental'), and students from both were enrolled in the study. The Ministry of Education nances the latter education system, providing services free of charge up to the end of secondary education (grade 12). With the majority of Oman's being under 20 years of age, national educational initiatives have grown exponentially in recent years, from three formal schools with 900 students in the previous decades, to 1053 public schools currently. In urban areas, there has been concurrent growth of private schools, which provide a bilingual stream of education.
Inclusion criteria consisted of the parents of children between the ages of 8 to 18 residing in Oman during the pandemic. Exclusion criteria consisted of the parents of children in schools catering to children and adolescents with special needs. In Oman, children with severe cognitive and social de cits often attend specialized schools for the 'handicapped'. However, children who are higher functioning with milder forms of learning disabilities are generally accommodated for in mainstream education. The protocol of the present study was not equipped to exclude such children and adolescents. Children with a diagnosis or history of behavioral and/or mental disorders prior to the onset of the pandemic was another exclusion criterion that was considered.

PROCEDURE
After obtaining ethical approval from the Institutional Research Board (IRB), the Ministry of Education overseeing public and private school education was approached to obtain o cial permission and cooperation to conduct the survey. The competent authorities for the schools residing in different parts of the country were contacted to cooperate in conducting this survey. At the time this study was conducted, there were 2,046 schools o cially registered in the 11 muhafazah or administrative regions of Oman [ 17 ], with a total number of 843,598 students (with an average of 27 students per class) [ 18 ]. Attempts were made to recruit participants from all the 11 muhafazah. One school -private or public -was randomly sampled from each muhafazah.
To conduct the study, the concerned school authorities that responded to the investigators' initial inquiry were contacted through e-mail, WhatsApp, or via phone calls to elaborate on the purposes of the survey. Google forms were then sent through email and WhatsApp to the principals of the targeted schools.

SAMPLE SIZE CALCULATION
We based our sample size on a previous study about the prevalence of depression in attendees of urban primary healthcare centers in Oman, using the patient health questionnaire (PHQ), the study reported the prevalence of depressive symptoms to be 8.1% (Al-Salmani et al., 2015) [ 19 ]. With a 95% con dence interval, a 2.5% margin of error, and with unknown population size, by using online software (EPITOOLS, 2020) [ 20 ] the required sample size for the survey was calculated to be 458.

DATA COLLECTION
Parents who ful lled the inclusion and exclusion criteria were requested to complete the study survey. In the attached description of the study, participants were explicitly informed that they were at liberty to terminate their participation in the study at any time if they so wish, without providing any justi cations to the investigators. Written informed consent was collected from all participants. The survey was anonymous, and the con dentiality of personal information collected was assured. Questionnaires were available both in English and in Arabic. Google forms were used to generate the questionnaires and links for parents were distributed using email and social media platforms. The returned surveys that were deemed to be invalid were excluded, and a total of 1500 valid responses were received. This gave a response rate of 52%.

OUTCOME MEASURE
The Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders Children and adolescents anxiety-related disorders, such as Generalized Anxiety, Separation Anxiety Disorder, Social Anxiety Disorder, School Phobia, as well as panic and somatic distress often accompanying such Anxiety Disorders, have been widely screened for using the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders (SCARED-41) [ 21 ]. SCARED-41 constitutes of ve-factor structure subtypes of anxiety-related disorders as de ned by the DSM IV-TR classi cation [ [21][22][23]. There are two versions -a child version, where children are meant to self-report their answers (SCARED-C), and a parent version, where parents are to answer the questionnaire as a proxy for their children (SCARED-P). Responses are recorded on a 3-point Likert scale (0 = "Not True, or Hardly Ever True", 1 = "Somewhat True or Sometimes True" or 3 = "Very True or Often True"). Some studies have suggested that child and parent versions of the SCARED-41 questionnaire have a high degree of concordance [ 21 ], but there have also been studies that indicate that informant discrepancy may reduce the reliability of the parent version [ 24,25 ].
The current study employed the use of the parental version (P-SCARED-41), which includes 41 items to screen for recent signs and symptoms of anxiety disorders in children (speci cally, over three months prior to the participant lling the questionnaire) [ 21 ]. The rationale behind using the parental version is the ongoing pandemic posing di culties for the investigators to contact both children and their parents, which would be necessary as parents or guardians are required to provide consent for their ward (between the ages of 0 to 18 years) to participate in online research. For this reason, only parents were approached to ll the research instrument.

P-SCARED-41 has been translated into various languages and their psychometric properties have been
reported to be adequate [ 26 ] including the presently used Arabic version [ 27,28 ]. English is also widely spoken in Oman, and to accommodate non-Arabic-speaking parents, the English version of P-SCARED-41 was also included. Both versions of the SCARED-41 questionnaire are publicly available [ 29 ].
The internal consistency of the P-SCARED-41 questionnaire used in the current study was found to be adequate (Cronbach's α=0.89). A reported questionnaire yielding a total score of 25 or above is considered suggestive of a clinically signi cant anxiety disorder [ 30 ]. Hence, this cut-off point was used in this study to indicate the presence of anxiety. In addition to the SCARED-41 questionnaire, the Google form consisted of questions devoted to collecting detailed sociodemographic data of the children and their parents, as shown in Table 1. Questions focusing on certain challenges faced by them owing to the unique circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic and the resultant lockdown were also asked, and the data collected is presented in Table  1.

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
Data was analyzed by IBM Statistical Package for Social Sciences or SPSS (IBM SPSS23.0 NY, USA), and the results of those who were identi ed as having anxiety symptoms (SCARED score >=25) or identi ed as without anxiety symptoms (SCARED score< 25) were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Univariate analysis was conducted, and demographic variables were evaluated with the chi-square test and odds ratio (OR) to explore the association between the two groups. Next, multivariate analysis was conducted using a logistic regression model, with anxiety disorder status as the dependent variable, and those variables with p<0.05 in the univariate analysis as the independent variables, and concurrently adjusted by each other. This analysis helped address the research aim to identify the contributing variables associated with an anxiety disorder. A pvalue of <0.05 was considered statistically signi cant.

ETHICAL APPROVAL
This study was approved by the Centre of Studies and Research at the Ministry of Health (MoH/CSR/19/10009). The study was conducted following the Declaration of Helsinki with regard to ethical human research, including con dentiality, privacy, and data management.

Results:
A total of 790 participants ful lled the inclusion criteria. Table 1 presents the results for both the parent's (or 'Respondent's') and children's demographic variables. Out of 790 children, 33.3% (n=263) ful lled the screening criteria for anxiety disorder as de ned by the SCARED-41 scale. More mothers participated in the study (n=627, 79.4%) than fathers (20.6%). The majority of the respondents were married (n=743, 94.1%), more than 70% (n=623) were ≥35 years old. More than half (n=426, 54.0%) of them had an income below USD 1, 999 per month, and 93.9% (n=742) of them were employed during the COVID-19 pandemic. More than 70.0% (n=627) of the respondent mothers had a high school level or lower education level (n=437, 55.3%). In contrast, a majority of the respondent fathers had a college degree or higher education level (n=437, 55.3%). The majority of the children of the participants were aged 8-11 years old (n=730, 92.4%) with more than 61% (n=483) studying in grades 3-6. The proportion of girls (49.0%) and boys (51.0%) were almost equal. Table 2 shows univariate and multivariate (logistic regression) analysis for sociodemographic data and its association with the child's anxiety. In the univariate analysis, a signi cant association was found between anxiety disorders and marital status of the parent ('not married' vs. 'married', p=0.043), educational level of the mother ('college degree' vs. 'post-graduate', p=0.037), family income per month ('<1,000' vs. '4,000', p=0.002; 1,000-1,999 vs. 4,000, p=0.021), and the child's grade level at school ('7-12' vs. '1-2', p=0.014; '3-6' vs. '1-2', p=0.009). The multivariate logistic analysis suggested a signi cant association of three demographic variables with the child's anxiety disorders. The model showed that children whose parents were divorced or separated were 1.9 times (OR=1.93, p=0.035) more likely to have anxiety disorders than children who had parents who were married. Children whose family income was below USD 1,000 per month were 1.8 times (OR=1.83, p=0.018) more likely to have anxiety disorders than those with a family income of USD 4,000 per month. Children in grades 3-6 were 1.8 times (OR=1.79, p=0.024) more prone to have anxiety disorders than those in grades 1-2.

Discussion:
Studies examining the prevalence of child and adolescent mental health problems have only recently begun to emerge from the Arabian Gulf countries such as Oman. The prevalence rates of children and adolescents in Oman with disordered eating habits is an estimated 9.5% [ 31 ], those with autism spectrum disorders in the range of 1.4-20.35/10,000 [ 32 ], and those with ADHD an estimated 8.8% [ 33 ]. Other children and adolescents' mental health problems, including but not limited to social phobia, mood disorders, learning disorders, and other adverse childhood experiences have also been reported [ 34 ]. In Uganda, it has been widely speculated that among many varied child mental health problems, anxiety appears to be most prevalent with a gure ranging from 10-20% of children and adolescents exhibiting core symptoms of anxiety-related disorders [ 35 ]. In the USA, using a face-to-face survey of 10123 Americans (ages between 13 and 18 years), Burstein et al.
[ 36,37 ] reported that around 3% and 9% of the participants have core features of generalized anxiety disorder. In a recent meta-analysis of six Arabian Gulf countries by Chan et al. [ 38 ], out of the accrued 33 studies that ful lled study criteria, the pooled prevalence of anxiety symptoms ranged from 17.27% to 57.04%. This critical appraisal covered the pre-pandemic era. It is not clear how the pandemic and all of the resulting tribulations have affected the child and adolescent population in Oman.
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in children and adolescents experiencing unprecedented interruptions to their daily lives, which are likely to precipitate poor mental health outcomes [ 8 ]. Studies carried out in different parts of the world during the pandemic strongly suggest this outcome, with the assumption that enforced social isolation is adversely impacting children's psychological functioning which is, in turn, conventionally manifesting as anxiety-related disorders [ 6,7,8,10,11 ]. Therefore, the present study has been conducted to investigate the prevalence rate of anxiety-related disorders in the children and adolescents of Oman during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the international prevalence of child and adolescent mental health problems constituted 13.4% of the sample of the 27 countries surveyed, with those a icted with anxiety-related disorders constituting 6.5% of the pooled sample [ 39 ]. In the United States, Hawes et al. [ 40 ] suggested that the frequency of anxiety-related disorders tend to strongly hinge on whether the region is experiencing a period of peak infection rates and having resultant lockdowns. This implies that anxiety-related disorders are situational. Compared to the global rate before the COVID-19 pandemic, the present rate appears to be higher than the pooled prevalence of 13.4%. There are various instruments available to solicit the presence of anxiety disorders, and the reported prevalence rates of these disorders may be impacted by the instrument used to study them. Studies that speci cally employ the SCARED questionnaire also may have results that are likely to vary when using the self-rated child version or when answering by proxy using the parent version. Therefore, comparisons between various studies would likely echo the metaphor of 'comparing apples and oranges', if this factor is not taken into consideration.
The present study in Oman suggests that 33.3% (n=263) ful lled the criteria for anxiety disorders, as de ned by the SCARED questionnaire. In comparison, Ravens-Sieberer et al. [ 41 ] conducted a nationally representative study (7-to 17-year-old children and adolescents) in Germany employing the child self-rated SCARED questionnaire, reporting a 24.1% prevalence of children who have reached the threshold for case-ness of anxiety-related disorders. In Iran, among adolescents with hearing loss during the COVID-19 pandemic, Ariapooran and Khezeli [ 42 ] reported 37.5% of the study participants having anxiety-related symptoms.
In several non-western societies, socio-cultural patterning tends to predominantly usher children into the collective mindset. There is evidence to suggest a tendency to lean towards a 'collective' social orientation, which is in contrast to 'individualistic' social orientation commonly found in Western countries. To preserve social harmony, according to Al Asmi et al. [ 43 ], "such a society tends to discourage the expression of emotion and therefore relegates emotional distress. Instead, distress is expressed in somatic terms, a feat that is orthogonal to what may constitute emotional distress in the psychiatric nomenclature…" (p.6). To extrapolate from such a view in the context of anxiety symptoms, being marked with somatic distress, anxiety symptoms are likely to be recognized and acknowledged by the parents of the children in Oman. In contrast, this view would imply that emotional distress, since it is stigmatized, is unlikely to be acknowledged. With this background, it is, therefore, safe to speculate that anxiety symptoms were highly endorsed by the parents because their manifestation does not contravene socio-cultural teachings. In the regions in the global south with the bulk of its population being children and adolescents, studies are needed to explore the interplay between cultural patterning and odium to distress.
As is often the case, mental distresses tend to be intimately linked to socio-demographic factors. To address such a link, the related aims of this study is to comprehensively examine which demographic factors unique to this period contribute to the development of anxiety symptoms solicited by Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders (SCARED-41). As shown in Table 1, this study accrued various sociodemographic factors including the type of family caregivers (mother or father). The majority of respondents to the survey were mothers rather than fathers, constituting 79.4% of the sample. Other sociodemographic sought from the parent included marital status of the parent, educational level of both parents, family income, current working status, family history of mental illness. For the children and adolescents, the grade age and gender of the child were sought. Both univariate and multivariate analysis was used to examine the associated factors with symptoms of anxiety. As shown in Table 2, socio-demographic factors signi cantly associated with anxiety symptoms include having divorced or separated parents, a family income below 1000 US dollars, and studying in scholastic grade levels between 3 to 6. These signi cant associated factors are recapitulated within the background literature below in tandem.
First, divorce was signi cant in the regression analysis. Recent divorce or separation may be likely to cause an acute stress reaction that may contribute to the chronicity of poor mental health outcomes. This study could not determine whether the divorce coincided with the outbreak of the pandemic or whether it preceded the pandemic. Current data shows that most of the respondents were married and were 35 years or older. Divorced or separated parents consisted of 8.4% of participants whose children were signi cantly associated with higher SCARED scores. It is well known that regardless of age, gender, and culture, children of divorced parents experience tend to succumb to poor coping mechanisms, and this could culminate in an increased risk of developing poor mental health outcomes [ 44 ]. Future studies, if the present study withstands further scrutiny, should de ne the types of separation or divorce and whether they occurred during the pandemic. It should also be critical to unravel whether the divorce/separation is recent or not. In addition to divorce or separation, it has been widely documented that required quarantine and social isolation have signi cantly reduced the opportunity to escape from caustic home environments. As a result, according to Lebow [ 45 ], "couples fall into angry exchanges without resolution or into patterns of demand-withdrawal, which may degenerate into protracted high con ict and sometimes domestic violence. In parallel, social interactions and social support that might mitigate tensions are decreased" (p. 968). This echoes the proverb "When the elephants ght, the grass gets trampled" [ 46 ]. Studies are needed on whether periods of quarantine and isolation, unstable family dynamics, and separation from a parental gure can be detrimental for children requiring greater amounts of emotional support.
Second, according to regression analysis family income was signi cant. Some studies suggest that the pandemic disproportionately affects children who are at a socio-economic disadvantage [ 47,8 ]. In support of such a view, the present study showed that there is an association with the higher SCARED score in children and adolescents of families with low socio-economic status (speci cally, those with a family income below 1,999 USD per month). Low-income families are facing greater degrees of nancial instability during the pandemic, with enforced lockdowns and curfews making it challenging for parents to meet the demands of dependent family members and children. The pandemic has also caused economic instability in the country which, in turn, is causing a lack of job security and uctuating incomes [ 48 ]. The resultant increased psychological burden on parents can simultaneously affect their children as well, which is a phenomenon that has been widely documented in the setting of the COVID-19 pandemic, including countries like Italy, Germany, and China [ [49][50][51].
Third, in addition to marital status and income, the scholastic grade of the children and adolescents was also signi cant. The majority were in the 8-11-year-old age group. The distribution of gender of the children was nearly equal (girls = 49.0%, boys = 51.0%). The participants with children attending grades 3 to 6 (usually including children in the 8-11-year-old age group) reported higher SCARED scores than other groups. One possibility for this is that at this age, children would likely be going to school under normal circumstances and therefore, the lockdown has limited their interactions with their peers. There is vast psychological literature suggesting that children of this age tend to develop social behaviors by interacting with their peers, rather than with their parents [ 52 ]. It is plausible that separation from their peers, as well as lack of access to social settings like playgrounds, have rendered these children vulnerable to increased anxiety and loneliness. Therefore, youth at this grade level may experience a greater interruption to their daily social life, causing more psychological distress [ 53,12 ].
Thus, the aforementioned factors associated with higher SCARED scores in children and adolescents include living in divorced households or with low family income. The age group is another factor that contributed to the development of higher SCARED scores. The present identi cation of socio-demographic factors contributing to the development of anxiety symptoms has the potential to lay the groundwork for contemplating prevention of poor mental health outcomes during and after the period of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Limitations:
These types of studies are prone to many limitations, and the most notable ones will be highlighted here. First, the generalization of this study is hampered by the fact that it was an online survey rather than a traditional pen and paper format. It is not clear whether the response rate tends to be higher among those who are 'technologically savvy', and might exclude parents who are not as technologically pro cient. Oman has a high penetration of internet access, which has increased signi cantly in tandem with the onset of the pandemic and a resultant shift to online learning and working from home [ 54 ]. Second, this study aims for the nationally representative parent of the school-going population. The bulk of Oman's population is under the age of 20 years, and the present sample might fall short of the required national representative. This is a signi cant limitation of this study until large community surveys are conducted. Third, the study is likely to be limited by the fact that the parent version of the SCARED scale was used. It is not clear whether such a proxy approach adequately re ects the spectrum of anxiety-related symptoms among children and adolescents. Further study of the reliability of this version of the questionnaire is therefore warranted. In another study utilizing the Arabic version of the SCARED questionnaire, it was found to have a parallel capacity to the original English version of identifying the presence of anxiety-related disorders [ 55 ]. In this study, both Arabic and English P-SCARED-41 were used. Future studies could examine whether different language versions of the P-SCARED-41 report similar results. Fourth, the cross-sectional design of this study provides a limited view of the longitudinal course of the mental well-being of the studies' participants. It is not clear whether the observed anxiety symptoms constitute acute stress reaction adjustment disorder or full-edged anxiety symptoms with all the negative repercussions this is likely to have. Last but not least, while SCARED has been molded to follow the criteria of DSM, soliciting emotional symptoms via an online questionnaire is considered suboptimal compared to gold standard structured interviews particularly tailored to non-western populations, where there is likely to be culture-speci c idioms for distress and anxiety disorders [ 31 ].

Conclusion:
This study explores the frequency of anxiety-related disorders in children and adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders questionnaire with a cut-off of >25, one-third of the parents endorsed their children or adolescents to be marked with anxiety-related symptoms. The second aim is to explore the factors associated with anxiety-related disorders in children. The notable risk factors were having a family income corresponding to low socio-economic status, having divorced or separated parents, and being in middle-grade levels in school. If this study were to withstand scrutiny, children and adolescents could be directed towards available mental health services. The identi cation of risk factors and formulation of psychological interventions for vulnerable groups can signi cantly help mitigate the negative mental health impacts of the pandemic on the youth of the country.

Competing interests
None. The authors declare that there are no con icts of/or competing interests.

Funding
This research received no speci c grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-pro t sectors.
Authors' contributions Drs Muna Alshekaili, Walid Hassan, Ghaniya Saif Al Ghafri and Fatima Alsulimani had full access to all of the data in the study and take responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.