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View the Depression Primer - an illustrated book about Depression

Can Children Headed for Teen Depression Be Spotted Early?

(HealthDay News)
by -- Jeff Muise
Updated: Jul 29th 2009

 

new article illustration

WEDNESDAY, July 29 (HealthDay News) -- It is possible to identify children at risk for development of depressive symptoms as early as age 7, offering the opportunity for early intervention to avert teenage depression, according to a study published online April 5 in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence.

James J. Mazza, Ph.D., of the University of Washington in Seattle, and colleagues analyzed data on 951 children across a six-year time period from second to eighth grade, using semi-parametric group modeling to identify patterns for the development of depressive symptoms in adolescence.

The researchers identified five group trajectories for boys and girls leading to depressive symptoms in adolescence: low depressed stables, low depressed risers, mildly depressed stables, moderately depressed changers, and moderately depressed risers. Shy or withdrawn behaviors were identified as risk factors across all of the groups, but other family and school related risk factors varied by group. For boys, antisocial behavior, attention problems, and low social competency were higher in the low depressed and mildly depressed stable trajectory groups.

"These findings regarding youth are remarkable for several reasons. First, it appears that children at risk for depressive symptomatology as young as second grade can be differentiated from their peers, both within gender and across gender, using teacher, parent, and self-report data. This suggests that early elementary school is a viable time for identifying and implementing prevention programs that focus on mental health needs of children who may be at risk for subsequent depressive phenomena," the authors write.

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