| Literature DB >> 30487838 |
Patricio Cumsille1, M Loreto Martínez1, Viviana Rodríguez2, Nancy Darling3.
Abstract
Depressive symptoms are prevalent in adolescence, but not all adolescents experience the same level or evolution of symptoms, suggesting the need to identify differences in trajectories of symptoms. We used Growth Mixture Modeling to analyze different trajectories of depressive symptoms in a sample of 1,072 Chilean adolescents (12-15 years old, 54% female). First, a baseline model was selected and then adolescent irritability, maternal warmth, demandingness and disrespect were introduced to the model as predictors of class membership. Four latent class trajectories of depressive symptoms were identified: high persistent (12%), low stable (56%), high decreasing (15%) and low increasing (17%). Low stable was the most prevalent class, and was characterized by higher maternal warmth and lower maternal disrespect and adolescent irritability while high persistent was characterized by the opposite maternal characteristics. Significant gender differences in class membership were observed. The results highlight the importance of identifying different trajectories of depressive symptoms and specific predictors of each trajectory. The association of parenting dimensions with trajectories of persistent depressive symptoms provides evidence that parenting can serve as both a protective and risk factor for adolescent adjustment.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Depressive symptoms; Ex post facto study; Growth mixture modeling; Trajectories
Year: 2015 PMID: 30487838 PMCID: PMC6225011 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijchp.2015.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Health Psychol ISSN: 1697-2600
Model Fit Comparisons for Models with 2 to 5 Classes N = 1,072.
| Class # | BIC | VLMR | LMR | BLRT |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 9268.945 | .0003 | .0003 | .0000 |
| 3 | 9198.937 | .0009 | .0011 | .0000 |
| 4 | 9131.197 | .0188 | .0212 | .0000 |
| 5 | 9150.129 | .6059 | .6165 | .6667 |
BIC= Bayes Information Criteria; VLMR= Vuong-Lo-Mendell-Rubin likelihood ratio test;
LMR= Lo-Mendell-Rubin likelihood ratio test; BLTR= Bootstrapping likelihood ratio test.
Figure 1Baseline trajectories of depressive symptoms.
Regression coefficients and OR comparing each class to the High persistent class.
| Low stable | High decreasing | Low increasing | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Predictor | Beta | OR | Beta | OR | Beta | OR |
| Maternal education | 0.36 | 1.439 | 0.17* | 1.188 | 0.23 | 1.270 |
| Maternal disrespect | -0.98 | 0.373 | -0.19 | 0.821 | -0.526 | 0.591 |
| Maternal warmth | 1.28 | 3.615 | 0.36 | 1.444 | 0.45 | 1.576 |
| Maternal demand/expectations | -0.89 | 0.407 | -0.25 | 0.774 | 0.08 | 1.091 |
| Irritability | -0.91 | 0.402 | -0.17 | 0.844 | -0.58 | 0.557 |
Note. Reference class is High persistent.
p < .05
p < .01.
Means by class (n = 707).
| Predictors | High persistent | Low Increasing | High decreasing | Low stable | Effect size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ω2 | |||||
| Maternal education | 4 (1.91) | 5.07 (2.11) | 4.74 (2.02) | 5.85 (1.92) | |
| Paternal education | 4.33 (1.92) | 5.36 (2.13) | 5.22 (2.15) | 6.03 (1.91) | |
| Maternal disrespect | 2.44a (0.90) | 1.99b (0.69) | 2.23a (0.75) | 1.68c (0.54) | .15 |
| Maternal warmth | 3.97a (1.03) | 4.30b (0.71) | 4.06ab (0.99) | 4.61c (0.55) | .13 |
| Maternal expectations | 4.43a (0.67) | 4.67a (0.46) | 4.50a (0.70) | 4.62a (0.55) | .01 |
| Irritability | 3.76a (0.76) | 3.49a (0.74) | 3.73a (0.71) | 3.22b (0.76) | .08 |
Note. Because of missing data in some of the predictor variables, data for this analysis was based on fewer cases. Means in rows with different letter are significantly different p < .01