Laura J Dietz1, Boris Birmaher2, Douglas E Williamson2, Jennifer S Silk2, Ronald E Dahl2, David A Axelson2, Mary Ehmann2, Neal D Ryan2. 1. Drs. Dietz, Birmaher, Silk, Dahl, Axelson, and Ryan and Ms. Ehmann are with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic; Dr. Williamson is with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.. Electronic address: dietzlj@upmc.edu. 2. Drs. Dietz, Birmaher, Silk, Dahl, Axelson, and Ryan and Ms. Ehmann are with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic; Dr. Williamson is with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To compare mother-child interactions and parenting styles in families of children with major depressive disorder, youths at high risk for depression, and healthy controls. METHOD: Currently depressed (n = 43), high-risk (n = 28), and healthy control (n = 41) youths and their mothers engaged in a standardized videotaped problem-solving interaction. Measures of affect and behavior for both mothers and children were obtained, in addition to global measures of parenting. RESULTS: Depressed children demonstrated more negativity and less positivity in dyadic interactions than did children at high risk and control children. Mothers of depressed children were more disengaged than control mothers. Exploratory repeated-measures analyses in a subgroup of depressed children (n = 16) suggested mother-child interactions do not significantly change when children recover from depression. Children at high risk demonstrated less positivity in dyadic interactions than did controls. Mothers with a history of major depressive disorder and mothers with higher current depressive symptoms demonstrated patterns of disengagement and low control in interactions with children. CONCLUSIONS: Mother-child interactions in depressed youths are marked by maternal disengagement and low child positivity that may not improve when children recover. The bidirectional effects of maternal disengagement and low levels of child positivity may precede onset of major depressive disorder in children and serve as risk factors for recurrent depression in youths.
OBJECTIVE: To compare mother-child interactions and parenting styles in families of children with major depressive disorder, youths at high risk for depression, and healthy controls. METHOD: Currently depressed (n = 43), high-risk (n = 28), and healthy control (n = 41) youths and their mothers engaged in a standardized videotaped problem-solving interaction. Measures of affect and behavior for both mothers and children were obtained, in addition to global measures of parenting. RESULTS:Depressedchildren demonstrated more negativity and less positivity in dyadic interactions than did children at high risk and control children. Mothers of depressedchildren were more disengaged than control mothers. Exploratory repeated-measures analyses in a subgroup of depressedchildren (n = 16) suggested mother-child interactions do not significantly change when children recover from depression. Children at high risk demonstrated less positivity in dyadic interactions than did controls. Mothers with a history of major depressive disorder and mothers with higher current depressive symptoms demonstrated patterns of disengagement and low control in interactions with children. CONCLUSIONS: Mother-child interactions in depressed youths are marked by maternal disengagement and low child positivity that may not improve when children recover. The bidirectional effects of maternal disengagement and low levels of child positivity may precede onset of major depressive disorder in children and serve as risk factors for recurrent depression in youths.
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