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Specifically, we hypothesized that individuals with a positive family history for depression and without a recent major life event would have the greatest number of past depressive episodes, whereas individuals with a negative family history and a pre-onset major life event would have the fewest.
- Figure - PMC - National Center for Biotechnology Information
Three of the most consistently reported and powerful...
- Figure - PMC - National Center for Biotechnology Information
Family history of depression and major life stress. Early work by Strecker (1922) suggested that manic-depressive patients with a history of recent life stress had fewer family members with a history of mental illness.
Three of the most consistently reported and powerful predictors of depression are a recent major life event, a positive family history for depression, and a personal history of past depressive episodes.
One of the strongest risk factors for depressive and anxiety disorders is a family history (FH) of these disorders, with a two-fold increased risk in patients' first-degree relatives as compared to healthy controls (Levinson, 2005; Micco et al., 2009; Rasic, Hajek, Alda, & Uher, 2014).
Depression and Social Dysfunction. The motivational and affective profile associated with depression can be expected to influence the ability to feel a sense of social belonging and how, in turn, these feelings influence well-being.
Familial risk for depression and anxiety is generally constructed as a simple dichotomization [hereafter referred to as family history (FH)] based on the presence (FH+) or absence (FH−) of a disorder in one or more relatives (e.g. see Milne et al., 2008).
1 Φεβ 2014 · In the present study we evaluated the relations between pre-onset major life events, family history for depression, and personal history of depression in a sample of 62 adults diagnosed with major depression. Based upon the literatures summarized above, we generated four predictions.