| Influences on Adolescent Depression: Mother's Depression and Smoking | |
NEW STUDIES EXAMINE INFLUENCES ON ADOLESCENT DEPRESSION: MOTHER'S DEPRESSION AND
SMOKING CAN WORSEN SYMPTOMS AND IMPAIR SOCIAL FUNCTIONING
WASHINGTON -- Two factors relatively common in adolescence, smoking cigarettes
and having a mother who suffers from depression, both increase the adolescent's
own susceptibility to depression, according to two new studies in this month's
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, published by the American
Psychological Association (APA).
In the first study, 110 15 year olds who experience current or past depression
and who have a depressed mother (65 -- 24 male, 41 female) or a non-depressed
mother (45 -- 9 male, 36 female) were compared on their depressive symptoms,
social functioning and how they viewed their interpersonal relationships.
Fifteen-year old children and their mothers were selected from a population of
mothers who had been studied since they were pregnant, including several times
after the birth of the child. The study sample included women who had been
depressed one or more times during the child's life or had never been depressed.
At age 15, those adolescents who had been raised by a mother who suffered from
depression since giving birth were more likely to have fewer friends and be less
involved in social activities than their depressed peers whose mother did not
suffer from depression, said lead author Constance Hammen, Ph.D., of the
University of California in Los Angeles and co-author Patricia A. Brennan,
Ph.D., of Emory University.
"The main difference we found," said the authors," is that the
adolescents with depressed mothers had more interpersonal difficulties, probably
because of the influence of their mother's depression and her own problems with
social functioning. The differences were specific to interpersonal functioning
and did not include academic performance."
Those depressed adolescents with depressed mothers were also more likely to have
negative views of their social lives and attitudes, according to the study. But
these adolescents were no more depressed nor more likely to have suffered their
first episode of depression earlier or have more depressive episodes than the
depressed adolescents with non-depressed mothers. And, interestingly,
proportionately more boys whose mothers were depressed suffered from depression
than girls whose mothers were depressed, said the authors, and more girls were
depressed in families whose mothers were not depressed than boys in the same
environment.
To halt the possibility of intergenerational transmission of depression, said
Dr. Hammen, interventions need to include social skills building and should be
targeted to children of depressed mothers to help reduce the risk of developing
depression in these children.
In the second study, psychologist Michael Windle, Ph.D., and Rebecca C. Windle,
M.S.W., of the University of Alabama at Birmingham investigated the
interrelationship of depression and cigarette smoking in 1,218 adolescents whose
average age was 15.
Those adolescents who smoked a lot (20 or more cigarettes every day for six
months) were likely to have more depressive symptoms for the year and half they
were followed than the adolescents who reported smoking less and lower levels of
depression. Plus, the teenagers with high levels of depression (measured by
questions that asked how often they felt lonely, or like a failure or hopeless)
were also smoking heavily. Both smoking and depression appeared to reciprocally
influence each other, said the authors, even after controlling for baseline
smoking levels, alcohol and other substance abuse and delinquent activities
(skipping school, aggressive toward teacher or parent, stole or vandalized
personal property and/or physically hurt someone).
It could be that adolescents or adults for that matter with high levels of
depression significantly increase cigarette smoking in attempt to alleviate
their depressive symptoms, say the authors. "But this actually can inhibit
the re-uptake of dopamine, one of the neurotransmitters implicated in causing
depression when low levels exist in the brain. This can account for the
underlying reciprocal relationship between nicotine and negative mood.
Furthermore, those who smoke heavily for a number of months may increase their
vulnerability to depression because of alterations in brain chemistry."
To help teenagers either kick their nicotine habit or keep them from smoking at
all and lower their risk for depression, said the authors, smoking interventions
should include programs that look at how these teenagers internalize their
problems -- do they have excessive negative moods, low self-esteem and suicidal
thoughts? These could be reasons for starting to smoke. Arming these at risk
teenagers with coping strategies could make all the difference.
Article: "Depressed Adolescents of Depressed and Nondepressed Mothers:
Tests of an Interpersonal Impairment Hypothesis," Constance Hammen, Ph.D.,
University of California, Los Angeles and Patricia A. Brennan, Ph.D., Emory
University; Journal of Counsulting and Clinical Psychology, Vol. 69, No. 2.
(Full text of the article is available after May 7 at http://www.apa.org/journals/ccp/ccp692284.html)
Article: "Depressive Symptoms and Cigarette Smoking Among Middle
Adolescents: Prospective Associations, and Intrapersonal and Interpersonal
Influences," Michael Windle, Ph.D., and Rebecca C. Windle, Ph.D.,
University of Alabama at Birmingham; Journal of Consulting and Clinical
Psychology, Vol. 69, No. 2
(The Full text of the article is available after May 7 at http://www.apa.org/journals/ccp/ccp692215.html)
---American Psychological Association
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