Author:
ANGOLD A.,COSTELLO E. J.,WORTHMAN C. M.
Abstract
Background. Previous work has indicated that the
2[ratio ]1 female[ratio ]male sex ratio in unipolar depressive
disorders does not emerge until some time between ages 10 and 15.Methods. Data from four annual waves of data collection from
the Great Smoky Mountains Study
(GSMS) involving children aged nine to 16 were employed.Results. Pubertal status better predicted the emergence of
the expected sex ratio than did age. Only
after the transition to mid-puberty (Tanner Stage III and above) were
girls more likely than boys
to be depressed. The timing of this transition had no effect on
depression rates. Before Tanner Stage
III, boys had higher rates of depression than girls, and the prevalence
of depression appeared to fall
in boys at an earlier pubertal stage than that at which it began to
rise in girls. In addition, recent
transition to Tanner Stage III or higher had a transient effect in
reducing the prevalence of depression in boys.Conclusions. The period of emergence of increased risk for
depression in adolescent girls appears to
be a relatively sharply demarcated developmental transition occurring
in mid-puberty. Previously
reported effects of the timing of puberty (which have tended to
be transient) appeared less important
in increase of risk for depression than pubertal status.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
773 articles.
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