Psychiatric disorder in adolescent offspring of parents with affective disorder in a non-referred sample
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Cited by (70)
Is maternal depression related to mother and adolescent reports of family functioning?
2018, Journal of AdolescenceCitation Excerpt :It has been shown that adolescent offspring of depressed parents have a significantly higher risk for developing depression than adolescent offspring of non-depressed parents (Weissman et al., 2016). In an early study, Beardslee et al. (1988) examined families with children between the ages of 6 and 19 years of age. At initial assessment, 30% of the children/adolescents with an affectively ill parent had at least one episode of an affective disorder compared with 2% in the control group.
Disruptive behavior disorders in offspring of parents with major depression: Associations with parental behavior disorders
2008, Journal of Affective DisordersMother-child interactions in depressed children and children at high risk and low risk for future depression
2008, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent PsychiatryPredicting school dropout and adolescent sexual behavior in offspring of depressed and nondepressed mothers
2007, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent PsychiatryImplications of High-Risk Family Studies for Prevention of Depression
2006, American Journal of Preventive MedicineCitation Excerpt :Children of depressed parents are approximately four times more likely to have an episode of major depression than children of normal controls and two times more likely compared to children of parents with other psychiatric disorders or medical conditions.9 Studies of child and adolescent offspring of probands from health maintenance organizations10,11and the community,12 and controlled family studies of adult relatives of children with depression,9,13 provide additional convincing evidence that major depression has a strong familial component. Furthermore, parental concordance for mood disorders or cross-concordance with other mental disorders as well as a heavy familial loading for depression (e.g., a double-dose of parent and grandparent depression) imparts even greater risk of disorder in susceptible offspring.14,15
Parental history of psychiatric diagnoses and unipolar depression: A Danish National Register-based cohort study
2015, Psychological Medicine
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With the support of: The William T. Grant Foundation; the National Institute of Mental Health through a grant entitled “Children at Risk for Affective Disorder” (Grant R0-1- MH34780-3) in conjunction with the Boston center of the National Institute of Mental Health-Clinical Research Branch, Collaborative Psychobiology of Depression Study (Grant 2- U02-MH25475-09); the Harris Trust through Harvard University; the Overseas Shipholding Group; the George P. Harrington Trust; and a Faculty Scholar Award of the William T. Grant Foundation to Dr. Beardslee.