Benjamin W Van Voorhees1, David Paunesku, Joshua Fogel, Carl C Bell. 1. Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, The University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland, MC 2007, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. bvanvoor@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although intervention tailoring could lower the burden of adolescent depression, few studies have examined differences in vulnerability factors between African American and European American youth. METHODS: We determined and compared the prevalence, relative risk, and population-attributable risk (PAR) of baseline vulnerability factors predicting depressive episodes at 1-year follow-up in a nationally representative sample of African American and European American adolescents. RESULTS: The leading (highest PAR) vulnerability factors for African American adolescents were demographics, while the top vulnerability factors for European American youth were current depressed affect and low perceived family connectedness. Unique vulnerability factors for African American youth were (1) neither parent finished high school, (2) believing oneself unintelligent, and (3) running away from home. Avoidant problem solving, divorce, poor residential father relationship, sexual relationships, and delinquent behaviors did not predict depressive episodes in African American adolescents but did in European American. Low family and peer connectedness were important common vulnerability factors for both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Differing patterns of vulnerability suggest that alternative strategies may be better suited to preventing depression among African American youth. A first step may lie in understanding what mediates the effect of low parental educational status on future depression risk.
BACKGROUND: Although intervention tailoring could lower the burden of adolescent depression, few studies have examined differences in vulnerability factors between African American and European American youth. METHODS: We determined and compared the prevalence, relative risk, and population-attributable risk (PAR) of baseline vulnerability factors predicting depressive episodes at 1-year follow-up in a nationally representative sample of African American and European American adolescents. RESULTS: The leading (highest PAR) vulnerability factors for African American adolescents were demographics, while the top vulnerability factors for European American youth were current depressed affect and low perceived family connectedness. Unique vulnerability factors for African American youth were (1) neither parent finished high school, (2) believing oneself unintelligent, and (3) running away from home. Avoidant problem solving, divorce, poor residential father relationship, sexual relationships, and delinquent behaviors did not predict depressive episodes in African American adolescents but did in European American. Low family and peer connectedness were important common vulnerability factors for both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Differing patterns of vulnerability suggest that alternative strategies may be better suited to preventing depression among African American youth. A first step may lie in understanding what mediates the effect of low parental educational status on future depression risk.
Authors: Lauren E Oddo; Julia W Felton; Michael C Meinzer; Heather Mazursky-Horowitz; Carl W Lejuez; Andrea Chronis-Tuscano Journal: J Atten Disord Date: 2019-08-16 Impact factor: 3.256
Authors: Tracy G Gladstone; Monika Marko-Holguin; Phyllis Rothberg; Jennifer Nidetz; Anne Diehl; Daniela T DeFrino; Mary Harris; Eumene Ching; Milton Eder; Jason Canel; Carl Bell; William R Beardslee; C Hendricks Brown; Kathleen Griffiths; Benjamin W Van Voorhees Journal: Trials Date: 2015-05-01 Impact factor: 2.279
Authors: Benjamin W Van Voorhees; Tracy Gladstone; Stephanie Cordel; Monika Marko-Holguin; William Beardslee; Sachiko Kuwabara; Mark Allan Kaplan; Joshua Fogel; Anne Diehl; Chris Hansen; Carl Bell Journal: Internet Interv Date: 2015-07-23