Clusters of behaviors and beliefs predicting adolescent depression: Implications for prevention

Citation

Paunesku, David; Ellis, Justin; Fogel, Joshua; Kuwabara, Sachiko; A; Gollan, Jackie; Gladstone, Tracy; Reinecke, Mark; Van; & Voorhees, Benjamin, et al. (2008). Clusters of behaviors and beliefs predicting adolescent depression: Implications for prevention. Journal of Cognitive and Behavioral Psychotherapies. vol. 8 (2) pp. 147-168

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Risk factors for various disorders are known to cluster. However, the factor structure for behaviors and beliefs predicting depressive disorder in adolescents is not known. Knowledge of this structure can facilitate prevention planning. METHODS: We used the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (AddHealth) data set to conduct an exploratory factor analysis to identify clusters of behaviors/experiences predicting the onset of major depressive disorder (MDD) at 1-year follow-up (N=4,791). RESULTS: Four factors were identified: family/interpersonal relations, self-emancipation, avoidant problem solving/low self-worth, and religious activity. Strong family/interpersonal relations were the most significantly protective against depression at one year follow-up. Avoidant problem solving/low self-worth was not predictive of MDD on its own, but significantly amplified the risks associated with delinquency. CONCLUSION: Depression prevention interventions should consider giving family relationships a more central role in their efforts. Programs teaching problem solving skills may be most appropriate for reducing MDD risk in delinquent youth.

URL

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2874909/

Keyword(s)

Depression Mental health

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Cognitive and Behavioral Psychotherapies

Author(s)

Paunesku, David
Ellis, Justin
Fogel, Joshua
Kuwabara, Sachiko
A
Gollan, Jackie
Gladstone, Tracy
Reinecke, Mark
Van
Voorhees, Benjamin
W

Year Published

2008

Volume Number

8

Issue Number

2

Pages

147-168

ISSN/ISBN

1584-7101

DOI

1584-7101

Reference ID

8860