The impact of maternal depression on adolescent adjustment: The role of expressed emotion (original) (raw)

Expressed emotion in mothers of currently depressed, remitted, high-risk and low-risk youth: Links to child depression status and longitudinal course

Journal of clinical …, 2009

This study examined Expressed Emotion in the families of children and adolescents who were: (1) in a current episode of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), (2) in remission from a past episode of MDD, (3) at high familial risk for developing MDD, and (4) low-risk controls. Participants were 109 mother-child dyads (children ages 8-19). Expressed emotion was assessed using the Five Minute Speech Sample. Psychiatric follow-ups were conducted annually following the Five Minute Speech Sample assessment. Mothers of children with a current or remitted episode of MDD and at high risk for MDD were more likely to be rated high on Criticism than mothers of controls. There were no differences in critical expressed emotion among mothers of children in the current, remitted, or highrisk for depression groups. Higher initial critical expressed emotion was associated with a greater likelihood of having a future onset of a depressive episode in high-risk and depressed participants. Diagnostic groups did not differ in Emotional Overinvolvement. Findings suggest that expressed emotion that is critical in nature may be a relatively stable characteristic feature of the family environments of children with and at high-risk for depression, and may be important in understanding the onset and clinical course of child adolescent depressive disorders.

Maternal Depression, Maternal Expressed Emotion, and Youth Psychopathology

Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2010

Across development, maternal depression has been found to be a risk factor for youth psychopathology generally and youth depression specifically. Maternal Expressed Emotion (EE) has been examined as a predictor of outcome among youth with depression. The present study explored the associations between youth psychopathology and two predictors-maternal depression within the child's lifetime and maternal EE-in a study of children at risk for depression. One hundred and seventy-one youth, ages 8-12, and their mothers participated. To assess maternal and youth psychopathology, dyads were administered structured diagnostic assessments, and mothers and children completed self-report measures of their own depressive symptoms. In addition, mothers completed the Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist-Parent Report Version (CBCL) for their children. Maternal EE was assessed based on the Five Minute Speech Sample. History of maternal depression was associated with high maternal EE, and the combination of maternal depression history and maternal EE was associated with children's own reports of higher depressive symptoms. Current maternal depressive symptoms were associated with mothers' reports of children's Internalizing scores on the CBCL, and maternal depression history, current maternal depressive symptoms, and maternal EE were strongly associated with mothers' reports of children's Externalizing and Total Problem scores on the CBCL. History of maternal depression and a rating of high or borderline Critical EE (characterized by maternal critical comments and/or reports of a negative relationship) were independently associated with children's depression diagnoses.

Role of Parental Expressed Emotions As Contributing Factor of Depressions In Adolescents

Journal of Positive School Psychology, 2022

Introduction: Parents are the child's first role model and perform a vital part in the upbringing of their children. Parental influence has a long-lasting effect on the life of an individual and children, learn, act, react, intimate, and behave like their parents. Parental expressed emotions as determinant of adolescent depression proposed a novel framework and for understanding its mechanisms of action current study has been planned. Methodology: A cross-sectional study was conducted to find out the parental expressed emotions as determinant of depression in adolescents. Purposive sampling technique was used to measure the effects of parental expressed emotions in adolescents. Researcher selected 500 parents (500 mothers & 500 fathers) and 500 adolescents of same parents during the period of March 2021 to October 2022.For that purpose parental expressed emotions scale and adolescents' depression scale were used and data were analyzed by applying regression analysis as well as descriptive statistics. Results: Finding reveals that father and mother both expressed emotions caused depression in adolescents with minor diversity as fathers expressed emotions caused 30 %, hostility 16 % Whereas, mother expressed emotions of critical comments caused 50%, hostility 0.080% depression in adolescents. Conclusion: Parental negative expressed emotions are recommended to improve in positive ways, so that the adolescent's psychopathology like depression can be reduce at initial level.

Emotional and Behavioural Problems among Adolescent Offsprings of Mothers with Depression 1

2013

Maternal depression has been linked to the development of adolescents’ emotional and behavioural problems. The main objective of this study was to determine the association between maternal depressive disorders and externalizing and internalizing problems among their adolescent children. This was a cross-sectional, comparison study of 35 mothers with depression and their adolescents, matched with 35 healthy mothers and their adolescents as controls. The mothers completed Quick Inventory Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) for assessment of current depression. The emotional and behavioural problems in the adolescents were assessed independently by the mothers and their adolescents off-springs using Child Behavioral Checklist (CBCL) and Youth Self-Report (YSR), respectively. SPSS version 12.0 was used for statistical analysis. The fi ndings showed that adolescents who have mothers with depressive disorders had signifi cantly higher scores of externalizing (mean difference = 4.686 + 10.88...

Current and Past Maternal Depression, Maternal Interaction Behaviors, and Children’s Externalizing and Internalizing Symptoms

Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2007

Relations among past maternal depressive disorder, current depressive symptoms, current maternal interaction behaviors, and children's adjustment were examined in a sample of 204 women and their young adolescent offspring (mean age=11.86, SD=0.55). Mothers either had (n=157) or had not (n=57) experienced at least one depressive disorder during the child's life. Mothers and children participated in a problem-solving task, video-taped for later coding. Mothers with current depressive symptoms and those with histories of chronic/severe depressive disorders displayed fewer positive behaviors toward their children; mothers with current depressive symptoms also showed more negative behaviors with their children. The relation between mothers' depression history and their behavior during the interaction with their child was partially mediated by mothers' current mood state. Moreover, high levels of maternal negativity and low levels of positivity during the problem-solving task were related to children's externalizing problems. Maternal positivity partially mediated the relation between maternal depression and children's externalizing symptoms. These findings highlight the importance of providing parenting interventions for depressed mothers.

Parental depressive symptoms, children's emotional and behavioural problems, and parents' expressed emotion-Critical and positive comments

PloS one, 2017

This longitudinal study examined whether mothers' and fathers' depressive symptoms predict, independently and interactively, children's emotional and behavioural problems. It also examined bi-directional associations between parents' expressed emotion constituents (parents' child-directed positive and critical comments) and children's emotional and behavioural problems. At time 1, the sample consisted of 160 families in which 50 mothers and 40 fathers had depression according to the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. Children's mean age at Time 1 was 3.9 years (SD = 0.8). Families (n = 106) were followed up approximately 16 months later (Time 2). Expressed emotion constituents were assessed using the Preschool Five Minute Speech Sample. In total, 144 mothers and 158 fathers at Time 1 and 93 mothers and 105 fathers at Time 2 provided speech samples. Fathers' depressive symptoms were concurrently associated with more child emotional problems when...

How does longitudinally measured maternal expressed emotion affect internalizing and externalizing symptoms of adolescents from the general community?

Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2011

Background: In previous studies, maternal expressed emotion (EE) has been found to be a good predictor of the course of adolescent internalizing and externalizing symptoms. However, these studies have been cross-section as opposed to longitudinal. The goal of this study is to examine longitudinal data of perceived maternal EE and adolescent internalizing and externalizing symptoms to determine if maternal EE affected the course of adolescent symptoms (a parent effect model), or if the course of adolescent symptoms affected maternal EE (a child effect model), or if maternal EE and adolescent symptoms affected one another bidirectionally. Methods: Dutch adolescents (N = 497; 57% boys; M = 13 years) from the general community and their mothers were prospectively studied annually for three years. At all waves the mothers completed the Level of Expressed Emotion (LEE) questionnaire and the adolescents completed self-rated measures of internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to analyze the longitudinal data. Results: The results of the SEM analyses clearly demonstrate that a child effect model best describes the relationship between maternal EE and the course of adolescent internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Conclusions: This longitudinal study of the mothers' EE perceptions suggests that it is the course of the internalizing and externalizing symptoms of adolescents from the general community that affects maternal EE, and not the mothers' perceived EE influencing the course of the adolescents' symptoms. Since this study was based on adolescents from the general community, it is suggested that these findings should also be replicated in clinical samples of adolescents.

Dynamic Associations between Maternal Depressive Symptoms and Adolescents’ Depressive and Externalizing Symptoms

Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2010

The current prospective study investigated transactional relations between maternal depressive symptoms and children's depressive and externalizing symptoms. Participants included 240 children (M age=11.86 years, SD=0.56; 53.9% female) and their mothers who were part of a 6-year longitudinal study. Measures of maternal depression (Beck Depression Inventory), child depression (Children's Depression Inventory), and children's externalizing symptoms (Youth Self-Report Form) were assessed annually. Data analyses using dynamic latent difference score structural equation models indicated that the observed relations between mothers' and adolescents' symptoms were stable across the 6 years. Higher levels of maternal depressive symptoms predicted subsequent elevations in children's depressive symptoms and in their externalizing problems over time. Among mothers with high initial levels of depression, children's depressive symptoms predicted subsequent declines in mothers' depressive symptoms. Children's externalizing problems were not related to subsequent change in maternal symptoms.