A systematic review of somatic symptoms in school refusal.

2021 
Objective School refusers often display somatic symptoms which are temporally related to school attendance. The aim of this systematic review is to summarize characteristics and causes of somatic symptoms and their management in the context of school refusal. Findings of this review may help clinicians in their daily practice. Methods Pubmed and Psycinfo databases were systematically searched (according to PRISMA guidelines) for articles mentioning somatic symptoms in school refusal by May 2020. Among 1,025 identified studies, 148 were included. Results Unspecific somatic symptoms were frequently the first complaints in school refusal. Abdominal pain, headache, nausea, vomiting, muscular or joint ache, diarrhea, dizziness, fatigue and palpitation were the most commonly encountered symptoms and were usually not accounted for by an identifiable physical disease. Anxiety was the most recurrent etiology found, but physicians' lack of awareness about psychological comorbidities often delayed psychological/psychiatric referral. Successful therapies consisted of dialectical behavior therapy, anxiety management through relaxation/breathing training and ignoring the somatic symptoms. Conclusions Somatic symptoms in school refusal are frequent but poorly understood. Their management could include interventions targeting anxiety, psychotherapies such as emotional awareness and expression therapy, third wave behavioral therapies and psychoeducation. A multidisciplinary approach through strengthened collaboration between school staff, physicians and psychologists/psychiatrists is needed to improve wellbeing in children who experience somatic symptoms as related to school avoidance.
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