Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Section, Institute of Psychological Medicine and Clinical Neurosciences, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, MRC centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, UK.
J Affect Disord. 2012 Dec 10;141(2-3):233-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2012.03.008. Epub 2012 May 18.
Parents with depression are thought to be unreliable reporters of children's depression symptoms, but findings are contradictory and primarily focus on discrepancies between parent and child reports rather than on the predictive validity of informants. Using a sample of parents with recurrent depression, our analyses utilised data from a prospective high-risk longitudinal study (the Early Prediction of Adolescent Depression study) to investigate whether baseline parental reports of child depression symptoms predicted new onset mood disorder (NOMD) in children.
The sample included 287 parents with a history of recurrent depression and their adolescent offspring (aged 9-17 at baseline). Families were assessed at three time points. The Child and Adolescent Psychiatric assessment (parent and child versions) was used to assess the number of child depression symptoms (computed separately by informant at baseline) and NOMD at follow-up. All DSM-IV diagnoses were confirmed by two child psychiatrists.
Parent reports of child depression symptoms at baseline significantly predicted NOMD in children. Secondary analyses stratifying the sample according to child age showed that, for younger children, parent reports were significantly better at predicting NOMD compared to child reports. For children aged 12 or older, there were no significant differences between parent and child reports in predicting NOMD. The pattern of association remained the same once we controlled for baseline levels of parental depression.
Not all parents were currently experiencing an episode of depression at the baseline assessments; the sample consisted predominantly of mothers, thus findings may not be applicable to fathers or families without a history of parental depression.
In this high risk sample, child and parent ratings of depression predict new onset child mood disorder to a similar degree. Clinicians and researchers should give due consideration to parent ratings of their children's depression symptoms, regardless of whether the parent suffers with depression.
人们认为患有抑郁症的父母对孩子的抑郁症状的报告不可靠,但研究结果却存在矛盾,主要集中在父母和孩子报告之间的差异上,而不是信息提供者的预测有效性上。本研究利用复发性抑郁症患者的样本,通过对一项前瞻性高风险纵向研究(青少年抑郁早期预测研究)的数据进行分析,调查了基线时父母对孩子抑郁症状的报告是否能预测孩子出现新的心境障碍(NOMD)。
该样本包括 287 名有复发性抑郁症病史的父母及其青少年子女(基线时年龄为 9-17 岁)。家庭在三个时间点进行评估。使用儿童和青少年精神病学评估(家长和儿童版本)来评估孩子的抑郁症状数量(在基线时分别由信息提供者计算)和随访时的 NOMD。所有 DSM-IV 诊断均由两名儿童精神科医生确认。
基线时父母对孩子抑郁症状的报告显著预测了孩子的 NOMD。对样本按孩子年龄进行分层的二次分析显示,对于年龄较小的孩子,父母的报告在预测 NOMD 方面明显优于孩子的报告。对于 12 岁或以上的孩子,父母和孩子报告在预测 NOMD 方面没有显著差异。在控制基线时父母的抑郁程度后,关联模式保持不变。
并非所有父母在基线评估时都正在经历抑郁发作;样本主要由母亲组成,因此研究结果可能不适用于父亲或没有父母抑郁病史的家庭。
在这个高风险样本中,儿童和家长对抑郁的评估在预测儿童新发病例心境障碍方面具有相似的程度。临床医生和研究人员应充分考虑父母对孩子抑郁症状的评估,而不论父母是否患有抑郁症。