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The role of social support in differentiating trajectories of adolescent depressed mood. | LitMetric

The role of social support in differentiating trajectories of adolescent depressed mood.

J Adolesc

Telethon Kids Institute, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia; School of Public Health, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: December 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study looked at how support from family, friends, and schools affects depression in 3,210 Australian teenagers aged 10 to 16 over four years.
  • Researchers found different patterns of mood changes in boys and girls and grouped them based on their feelings.
  • The results suggest that having good support, especially from friends and family, can help lower feelings of depression, and schools should create programs that work differently for boys and girls to help them better.

Article Abstract

Introduction: This study explored the extent to which disaggregated support from family, peers, close friendships, teachers, and schools predicted membership into identified, sex-specific trajectories of depressed mood in 3210 Australian adolescents (49% females) based on self-report data collected at four annual time points from school Grade 6 to 9 (ages 10-16).

Methods: The sample was initially split by sex. Group-Based Trajectory Modelling was used to identify the trajectory groups using a Censored Normal model, starting with a two-group model and increasing group size in increments of one, up to a six-group model. Overall model-fit and specific model-fit criteria were examined, and participants were allocated to best-fit groups. Multinomial Logistic Regression examined the associations between baseline social supports and allocated trajectory group membership.

Results: For boys, four trajectory groups were identified which were given the qualitative labels; Low Stable, Moderate Stable, Moderate Decreasing, and High Stable. Regression analysis showed that higher rates of peer belonging were associated with membership in the low and moderate groups compared to the High Stable group. For girls, four trajectory groups were identified and labelled as Low Stable, Moderate Decreasing, Moderate Increasing and High Increasing. Regression analysis showed that higher rates of family support, school climate, and peer belonging were associated with membership in the low and moderate groups compared to the High Increasing group.

Conclusions: Implications included the need for school-based early intervention programs to consider disaggregated supports and vary their interventions by sex. Limitations and directions for future research are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2020.09.004DOI Listing

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