Associations between childhood anxiety disorder status and outcomes in young adulthood. Note: Starred bars are significantly different from the group with no childhood anxiety disorder. For health outcomes, subjects with a history of either separation anxiety (SEP) or generalized anxiety (GAD) had poor outcomes (SEP: β=0.63, SE=0.26, p=0.015; GAD: β=0.66, SE=0.17, p<0.001), but not those with a history social phobia (SOC: β=0.26, SE=0.36, p=0.47. Subjects with generalized anxiety had more financial problems in young adulthood (GAD: β=0.51, SE=0.19, p=0.006). This was not the case for those with separation anxiety or social phobia (SEP: β=0.33, SE=0.23, p=0.15; SOC: β=−0.04, SE=0.35, p=0.91). Individuals with a history of either social phobia (SOC: β=1.09, SE=0.53, p=0.042) or generalized anxiety (GAD: β=−0.47, SE=0.22, p=0.034) had poor social outcomes. Those with a history of separation anxiety (SEP: β=−0.28, SE=0.18, p=0.13 did not have significantly worse interpersonal outcomes than those with no history of childhood anxiety. Individuals with childhood overanxious disorder had poor health (β=1.24, SE=0.23, p<0.0001), financial (β=0.58, SE=0.24, p=0.017) and social outcomes (β=1.10, SE=0.27, p<0.0001).