| Literature DB >> 24092979 |
Nádia Nara Rolim Lima1, Vânia Barbosa do Nascimento, Sionara Melo Figueiredo de Carvalho, Luiz Carlos de Abreu, Modesto Leite Rolim Neto, Aline Quental Brasil, Francisco Telésforo Celestino Junior, Gislene Farias de Oliveira, Alberto Olavo Advíncula Reis.
Abstract
As an important public health issue, childhood depression deserves special attention, considering the serious and lasting consequences of the disease to child development. Taking this into consideration, the present study was based on the following question: what practical contributions to clinicians and researchers does the current literature on childhood depression have to offer? The objective of the present study was to conduct a systematic review of articles regarding childhood depression. To accomplish this purpose, a systematic review of articles on childhood depression, published from January 1, 2010 to November 24, 2012, on MEDLINE and SciELO databases was carried out. Search terms were "depression" (medical subject headings [MeSH]), "child" (MeSH), and "childhood depression" (keyword). Of the 180 retrieved studies, 25 met the eligibility criteria. Retrieved studies covered a wide range of aspects regarding childhood depression, such as diagnosis, treatment, prevention and prognosis. Recent scientific literature regarding childhood depression converge to, directly or indirectly, highlight the negative impacts of depressive disorders to the children's quality of life. Unfortunately, the retrieved studies show that childhood depression commonly grows in a background of vulnerability and poverty, where individual and familiar needs concerning childhood depression are not always taken into consideration. In this context, this review demonstrated that childhood-onset depression commonly leads to other psychiatric disorders and co-morbidities. Many of the retrieved studies also confirmed the hypothesis that human resources (eg, health care team in general) are not yet adequately trained to address childhood depression. Thus, further research on the development of programs to prepare health care professionals to deal with childhood depression is needed, as well as complementary studies, with larger and more homogeneous samples, centered on prevention and treatment of childhood depression.Entities:
Keywords: child; depression; depressive disorder; mental disorders; mental health
Year: 2013 PMID: 24092979 PMCID: PMC3788699 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S42402
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Figure 1Flow chart showing study selection for the review.
Abbreviations: DeCS, Health Sciences Descriptors; MeSH, medical subject headings.
Childhood depression: studies and main findings
| Author | Journal | Sample | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Avanci et al | 464 children (aged 6–10 years) from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | The following variables are potential psychosocial factors associated with depression in childhood: average/poor relationship with the father, high frequency of victimization by psychological violence (humiliation), parental divorce, and externalizing behavior problems. | |
| Buckingham-Howes et al | 76 prenatally drug exposed and 38 nonexposed adolescent-caregiver dyads | Prenatal drug exposure may interfere with emotion regulation, resulting in anxious/depressed behavior during childhood. | |
| Lewis et al | 271 children/adolescents (aged 9–16 years) whose mothers had experienced at least two episodes of DSM-IV major depression and 165 controls (aged 12.25–16.67 years) | Recurrent maternal depression does not appear to interact with gene variants thought to be involved in the regulation of the stress response and predict symptoms of depression in children and adolescents in this sample. | |
| Fite et al | 276 children (aged 6–12 years) admitted to a child psychiatric inpatient facility | Relational aggression was associated with depressive symptoms. The link between relational aggression and suicidal ideation was fully accounted for by depressive symptoms. | |
| Lewis et al | 852 families with a child born by assisted conception | Associations between parent and child depressive symptoms is due in part to environmental processes independent of inherited effects and is not accounted for by shared adversity measurements. | |
| Luking et al | 51 children (aged 7–11 years) | The study found an attenuated relationship between the amygdala and cognitive control regions, which is consistent with a hypothesis of altered regulation of emotional processing in major depressive disorder with early-childhood-onset. | |
| Tonmyr et al | 4,381 children (aged 10–15 years) | Child and family factors, and factors indicating social dislocation, play an important role in the child welfare workers’ identification of anxiety/depression in children. The association of emotional maltreatment with child anxiety/depression should be further explored. | |
| Mennella et al | 300 children (aged 5–12 years) | The co-occurrence of having a family history of alcoholism and self-reports of depressive symptomatology was associated significantly with a preference for a more concentrated sucrose solution. | |
| O’Donnell et al | 88 children (5th and 6th graders) from two urban schools | Parental warmth/rejection mediated the relation between IPC and depression, and general cognitive style acted as a moderator. | |
| Lewis et al | 287 parents with a history of recurrent depression and their adolescent offspring (aged 9–17 years) | Clinicians and researchers should give due consideration to parent ratings of their children’s depression symptoms, regardless of whether the parent suffers with depression. | |
| Gaffrey et al | 306 preschoolers (aged 3–5.11 years) | Preschoolers meeting all DSM-IV MDD criteria except for episode duration exhibit a clinically significant form of depression and experience a 2-year MDD outcome similar to those meeting full criterion. | |
| Kösters et al | Children aged 10–12 years from 20 primary schools in Amsterdam | ‘FRIENDS for Life’ is effective as an indicated school-based prevention program for children with early or mild signs of anxiety or depression. | |
| Mihalopoulos et al | Children and adolescents (aged 11–17 years) in the 2003 Australian population | After school screening, screening and the psychological intervention represent good value-for-money. Such an intervention needs to be seriously considered in any national package of preventive health services. | |
| Banh et al | 3,593 children (from 6th and 8th grades) | Although there may be differences in symptom endorsements among depressed individuals across racial/ethnic groups, these differences do not impact overall scores. | |
| Esbjørn et al | 667 youth from community schools (aged 8–16 years) | The RCADS-DAN is a valid assessment tool for screening of anxiety and depression in Danish youth. | |
| Boylan et al | 1,329 children (aged 4–7 years) | While anxiety and depression can be measured independently of each other in childhood, individual items for depression and anxiety may change in their strength as indicators of respective constructs across age. | |
| Ebesutani et al | 606 children and adolescents (aged 8–18 years) of public and private schools | The PANAS-C-P PA and NA scale scores related to measures of anxiety and depression in a manner consistent with the tripartite model. | |
| Fernando et al | 372 participants (62 with childhood-onset, 101 with teenage-onset, and 209 with adult-onset depression) | Depressive episodes that begin in childhood or teenage years are associated with more comorbid diagnoses, a higher likelihood of Avoidant and Paranoid PD, a greater likelihood of attempted suicide, and poorer perceptions of paternal care. | |
| Hipwell et al | 2,451 girls (aged 5–8 years) | Symptoms of conduct disorder tend to precede depression in girls during childhood and adolescence. Oppositional defiant disorder dimensions should be assessed when evaluating risk for comorbid depression in girls with conduct problems. | |
| Kohrt et al | 162 children (aged 11–14 years) from one randomly selected school | Highlight the potential pitfalls of assuming that only translation and back-translation can capture cultural differences in performance of mental health instruments. | |
| Osika et al | 534 healthy school children (12–16 years old) from two schools in Göteborg region | Although psychological ill-health is associated with impaired endothelial function and CVD among adults, such processes may also be relevant to children. | |
| Wakimizu et al | 118 family caregivers and 100 children with childhood cancer (aged 2–18 years) | Overall levels of depression (DSRS-C scores) were not as high as those reported in previous studies. | |
| Ebesutani et al | 490 children and adolescents (aged 6–18 years) from two mental health clinics | RCADS-P possesses favorable psychometric properties in a sample of clinic-referred children and adolescents. The RCADS-P appears to be a valuable measure for identifying youths with depression and specific anxiety disorders. | |
| Forbes et al | 66 children and adolescents (aged 8–16 years) diagnosed with MDD with comorbid anxiety, MDD only, or ANX. | A more typical profile of baseline affective functioning in natural settings (that is, lower NA and higher PA) and time with fathers, could provide a foundation for treatment response in children and adolescents. | |
| Lenze et al | Eight parent-child dyads with depressed preschoolers | PCIT-ED seems to be a promising treatment for preschoolers with depression. | |
Abbreviations: DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV; MDD, Major Depressive Disorder; RCADS-DAN, Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale, Danish version; PANAS-C-P, Positive and Negative Affect Schedule for Children-Parent Version; PA, positive affect; NA, negative affect; PD, personality disorder; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DSRS-C, Depression Self-Rating Scale for Children; RCADS-P, Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale – Parent Version; ANX, anxiety; PCIT-ED, Parent Child Interaction Therapy – Emotion Development; IPC, interparental conflict; BMC, BioMed Central.