Child and Adult Depression: A Test of Continuities with Data from a Family Study

The summaries of clinical data on children attending the Maudsley Hospital during the years 1968-72 were used to identify 80 children meeting operational criteria for depression, and 80 matched psychiatric control children. At follow-up, on average 18 years after the initial contact, information was...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of psychiatry 1993-05, Vol.162 (5), p.627-633
Hauptverfasser: Harrington, R. C., Fudge, H., Rutter, M. L., Bredenkamp, D., Groothues, C., Pridham, J.
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container_end_page 633
container_issue 5
container_start_page 627
container_title British journal of psychiatry
container_volume 162
creator Harrington, R. C.
Fudge, H.
Rutter, M. L.
Bredenkamp, D.
Groothues, C.
Pridham, J.
description The summaries of clinical data on children attending the Maudsley Hospital during the years 1968-72 were used to identify 80 children meeting operational criteria for depression, and 80 matched psychiatric control children. At follow-up, on average 18 years after the initial contact, information was obtained on the adult outcomes of 62 of the depressed children and 69 of the controls. At least one first-degree relative of 111 (85%) of these probands was interviewed; the great majority of interviews with relatives were conducted ‘blind’ to the proband's symptoms in both childhood and adulthood. The lifetime prevalence of RDC depression was significantly higher in the 128 interviewed relatives of the depressed children than in the 151 relatives of the controls. Higher rates of depression were found among the female relatives of both the depressed and control probands. These findings suggest that depression in young people resembles depression in adults in two key respects: it tends to run in families, and there are higher rates of depression among the female than among the male first-degree relatives.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Adults
Antidepressants
Child
Childhood
Children
Depressive Disorder - diagnosis
Depressive Disorder - psychology
Family
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Life course
Male
Mental depression
Middle Aged
Operational criteria
Relatives
Sex Factors
Youth
title Child and Adult Depression: A Test of Continuities with Data from a Family Study
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