| Literature DB >> 25649024 |
Ingunn Ranøyen1, Frode Stenseng2,3, Christian A Klöckner4, Jan Wallander5, Thomas Jozefiak6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Symptoms of anxiety and depression are significantly associated in parents and children, but few studies have examined associations between recurrent parental problems and offspring symptoms, and fathers have rarely been included in these studies. Additionally, few have investigated factors that may protect against familial aggregation of anxiety and depression. The aims of the present study are to examine the associations between recurrent parental anxiety/depression over a ten-year time span and offspring anxiety/depression in adolescence and to test whether two factors proposed to be inversely related to anxiety and depression, namely, adolescent self-esteem and physical activity, may moderate and mediate the transmission of anxiety/depression.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25649024 PMCID: PMC4324879 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1431-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Conceptual model examined in the present study. We tested for invariance across sexes and different levels of offspring physical activity.
Figure 2Flowchart of the participants in the present study.
Correlations of the variables (standard errors in parentheses)
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| 1. Offspring anxiety/depression | - | .571 (.020) | .119 (.024) | -.118 (.028) | -.138 (.031) | -.103 (.031) | -.093 (.035) |
| 2. Offspring self-esteem | .640 (.015) | - | .225 (.022) | -.075 (.028) | -.107 (.030) | -.066 (.031) | -.092 (.033) |
| 3. Offspring physical activity | .134 (.022) | .195 (.021) | - | -.071 (.024) | -.076 (.026) | -.069 (.027) | -.080 (.030) |
| 4. Maternal anxiety/depression | -.129 (.026) | -.106 (.025) | -.027 (.023)n.s. | - | .231 (.035) | .506 (.025) | .149 (.038) |
| 5. Paternal anxiety/depression | -.202 (.027) | -.102 (.029) | -.131 (.026) | .263 (.032) | - | .209 (.038) | .551 (.030) |
| 6. Maternal preschool anxiety/depression | -.090 (.027) | -.109 (.029) | -.055 (.026) | .495 (.025) | .146 (.036) | - | .323 (.040) |
| 7. Paternal preschool anxiety/depression | -.096 (.033) | -.138 (.034) | -.107 (.031) | .060 (.037)n.s. | .546 (.027) | .208 (.039) | - |
Daughters are below the diagonal and sons are above the diagonal. All correlations were statistically significant (p < .05), except if otherwise indicated by a superscript.
Figure 3Associations between parental anxiety/depression when offspring were at preschool age and offspring anxiety/depression in adolescence. Standardised coefficients and p values are presented. Associations for daughters are presented in the upper part of the figure; associations for sons are presented in the lower part of the figure.
Figure 4Parental anxiety/depression in adolescence as a mediator. The associations between parental anxiety/depression when offspring were preschool aged and offspring anxiety/depression in adolescence mediated by parental anxiety/depression in adolescence for daughters (the upper part of the figure) and sons (the lower part of the figure), presented with standardised coefficients and p values (statistically significant paths are in black (p < .05), non-significant paths are in grey).
Figure 5Adolescent self-esteem as a mediator. The associations between parental anxiety/depression and adolescent offspring anxiety/depression mediated by adolescent self-esteem presented with standardised coefficients and p values. Associations for daughters are presented in the upper part of the figure; associations for sons are presented in the lower part of the figure.
Figure 6Adolescent physical activity level as a moderator. The associations between parental anxiety/depression and offspring anxiety/depression in adolescence mediated by adolescent self-esteem for the two physical activity groups (low and regular) are presented with standardised coefficients and p values (statistically significant paths are in black (p < .05), non-significant paths are in grey). Associations for the low physical activity group are presented in the upper part of the figure; associations for the regular physical activity group are presented in the lower part of the figure.