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In this study, having multiple prior affected generations was associated with increased risk of childhood psychopathology. Furthermore, these findings were detectable even at prepubertal ages and existed in diverse racial/ethnic and socioeconomic groups.
Life Stress and Family History for Depression: The Moderating Role of Past Depressive Episodes. Three of the most consistent and powerful predictors of depression are a recent major life event, a positive family history for depression, and a personal history of depressive episodes.
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). However, despite its status as an established risk factor for psychopathology, findings ...
Aartjan T. F. Beekman , Catharina A. Hartman , Albert M. van Hemert and. Brenda W. J. H. Penninx. Article. Figures. Supplementary materials. Metrics. Save PDF. Rights & Permissions. Abstract. Background.
The morbidity risk for relatives of individuals who had a single lifetime episode of depression was signi cantly lower (5.4%) fi than it was for relatives of individuals who experienced recurrences (12.65%). Thus, a personal history of depression should be associ-ated with a positive family history of depression.
26 Ιουν 2024 · The primary focus of the upcoming study will be to explore the intricate relationship between the first episode of major depression (FEMD) and various contributing factors, including social support, familial history of depression, and negative life events.
We aimed to determine whether depressed patients with a positive family history of depression differed from those without in terms of baseline sociodemographic and clinical characteristics, including concurrent comorbid conditions and treatment outcome with citalopram in a large, multicenter effectiveness trial.