The following hypotheses were tested in a longitudinal, population - based study: (1) Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms are associated with peer dislike and victimisation; (2) Peer dislike and victimisation increase the risk
for subsequent depression; and (3) The effect of ADHD symptoms on depression is partly mediated through peer dislike and victimisation.
Not exact matches
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depression, fertility and
depression, maternal mental illness, media attention on maternal mental illness, medication for depression, medication for perinatal illness, Motherhood work - life balance, myths of mental illness, National women's initiatives, new moms adjustment, perinatal depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, Psychotherapy and Depression, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: anxiety and pregnancy, depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression, maternal mental illness, media attention on maternal mental illness, medication
for depression, medication for perinatal illness, Motherhood work - life balance, myths of mental illness, National women's initiatives, new moms adjustment, perinatal depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, Psychotherapy and Depression, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: anxiety and pregnancy, depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression, medication
for perinatal illness, Motherhood work - life balance, myths of mental illness, National women's initiatives, new moms adjustment, perinatal
depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, Psychotherapy and Depression, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: anxiety and pregnancy, depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum
depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, Psychotherapy and Depression, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: anxiety and pregnancy, depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, Psychotherapy and
Depression, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: anxiety and pregnancy, depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
Depression,
subsequent postpartum illness, Support
for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal
depression Tags: anxiety and pregnancy, depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression Tags: anxiety and pregnancy,
depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression and anxiety disorders, domestic violence and perinatal
depression, fertility issues and depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression, fertility issues and
depression, Paternal Postnatal Depression, social supports, women's men
depression, Paternal Postnatal
Depression, social supports, women's men
Depression, social supports, women's mental health
Posted in baby blues, breastfeeding and postpartum
depression, maternal mental illness, media attention on maternal mental illness, myths of mental illness, National women's initiatives, new moms adjustment, Paternal Postnatal Depression, perinatal depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: depression and anxiety disorders, health insurance coverage, Inspirational stories & positive changes, Mental health and the Law, National women's initiatives, new parents adjustment, Paternal Postnatal Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
depression, maternal mental illness, media attention on maternal mental illness, myths of mental illness, National women's initiatives, new moms adjustment, Paternal Postnatal
Depression, perinatal depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: depression and anxiety disorders, health insurance coverage, Inspirational stories & positive changes, Mental health and the Law, National women's initiatives, new parents adjustment, Paternal Postnatal Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
Depression, perinatal
depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: depression and anxiety disorders, health insurance coverage, Inspirational stories & positive changes, Mental health and the Law, National women's initiatives, new parents adjustment, Paternal Postnatal Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
depression and infertility, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, postpartum
depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders, subsequent postpartum illness, Support for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal depression Tags: depression and anxiety disorders, health insurance coverage, Inspirational stories & positive changes, Mental health and the Law, National women's initiatives, new parents adjustment, Paternal Postnatal Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
depression, pregnancy and perinatal mood disorders,
subsequent postpartum illness, Support
for postpartum moms, supporting depressed spouses & partners, worldwide treatment of maternal
depression Tags: depression and anxiety disorders, health insurance coverage, Inspirational stories & positive changes, Mental health and the Law, National women's initiatives, new parents adjustment, Paternal Postnatal Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
depression Tags:
depression and anxiety disorders, health insurance coverage, Inspirational stories & positive changes, Mental health and the Law, National women's initiatives, new parents adjustment, Paternal Postnatal Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
depression and anxiety disorders, health insurance coverage, Inspirational stories & positive changes, Mental health and the Law, National women's initiatives, new parents adjustment, Paternal Postnatal
Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
Depression, perinatal disorders, postpartum
depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's men
depression, pregnant women, stigma of mental health, women's mental health
Her
subsequent books on postpartum
depression, The Postpartum Husband: Practical Solutions for Living with Postpartum Depression (xlibris, 2001) and What Am I
depression, The Postpartum Husband: Practical Solutions
for Living with Postpartum
Depression (xlibris, 2001) and What Am I
Depression (xlibris, 2001) and What Am I Thinking?
All of the hoops we jumped through to try and «figure it out» were not worth it
for all of the agony and
subsequent depression it produced.
Postpartum
depression occurs 27 to 46 times more frequently during
subsequent pregnancies
for mothers who experienced it after their first birth, researchers report.
«History of a miscarriage or stillbirth should be a red flag
for risk of
subsequent depression, and something all doctors should ask about,» he says.
The risk of postpartum
depression in
subsequent births was 15 percent
for women who took antidepressants following their first birth and 21 percent
for women who sought
depression treatment at a hospital.
Information is given on what support is available, and how to find it
for all aspects of the postpartum experience, including the early weeks after giving birth, breastfeeding, postpartum
depression, returning to work, being a stay - at - home mom, and coping after
subsequent births.
For example, exposure to conflict has been linked to
depression, distress, and anxiety; feelings of hurt and anger; relationship dissatisfaction; and
subsequent physical violence.
«It would be worthwhile to examine these relationships among older adolescents and young adults with food allergy who are at the peak of risk
for depression onset, especially because early anxiety is associated with increased risk
for subsequent onset of
depression,» said Jonathan Feldman, PhD, professor of Psychology at Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University.
Women who've had one episode of postpartum
depression have a 50 % risk of getting
depression again with a
subsequent pregnancy, says Ruta Nonacs, MD, associate director of the Center
for Women's Health at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
The risk of postpartum
depression in
subsequent births was 15 percent
for women who took antidepressants following their first birth and 21 percent
for women who sought
depression treatment at a hospital.
To check
for reverse causation, that depressive symptoms may affect
subsequent sugar intake from sweet food / beverages, linear regression models of 5 - year change and multinomial logistic regression
for change groups were fitted
for each cycle, from phases 3 to 5, 5 to 7 and 7 to 9, with CMD at phases 3, 5, 7 respectively, and
for change from phase 7 to 9 with
depression at phase 7.
There are several plausible biological explanations
for an association of habitual sugar intake and
subsequent risk of
depression, in the long - term.
If an event mediated strip stabilizes in form then there might be a
depression in growth
for a few years as a result of injury, but the
subsequent growth should be «normal»
Given that children are not yet through the period of risk
for the development of major
depression and that so few children in the comparison group met diagnostic criteria
for any depressive disorder, the dimensional severity measure derived from the Mood and Feelings Questionnaire was used in
subsequent analyses examining predictors of
depression in the children.
One evaluation conducted in Queensland, Australia, reported moderate reductions in depressive symptoms
for mothers in the intervention group at the six - week follow - up.89 A
subsequent follow - up, however, suggested that these benefits were not long lasting, as the
depression effects had diminished by one year.90 Similarly, Healthy Families San Diego identified reductions in
depression symptoms among program mothers during the first two years, but these effects, too, had diminished by year three.91 In Healthy Families New York, mothers at one site (that was supervised by a clinical psychologist) had lower rates of
depression at one year (23 percent treatment vs. 38 percent controls).92 The Infant Health and Development program also demonstrated decreases in depressive symptoms after one year of home visiting, as well as at the conclusion of the program at three years.93 Among Early Head Start families, maternal depressive symptoms remained stable
for the program group during the study and immediately after it ended, but decreased just before their children entered kindergarten.94 No program effects were found
for maternal
depression in the Nurse - Family Partnership, Hawaii Healthy Start, Healthy Families Alaska, or Early Start programs.
At
subsequent visits, social workers assessed multiple domains individually using SEEMAPS (social, economic, environmental, mental health, activities of daily living, physical health, and strengths) and screened
for possible issues with substance abuse, domestic violence, and
depression to obtain a holistic picture of family strengths and needs.
This kind of thinking is still assumed to be typical
for patients recovered from
depression, who can be vulnerable to
subsequent periods of low mood, as this may re-activate the negative cognitions.
Older men with substance use disorders are at greater risk
for nonfatal attempts and
for death by suicide than are younger persons.10, 11 Past suicide attempts are a strong risk factor
for subsequent suicidal behaviors in those with substance use disorders.12 Depressed mood is a risk factor
for suicidal behaviors in the general population and also predicts a greater likelihood of suicide in those with alcohol or drug use disorders.3, 6,10 The link between
depression and suicidal behaviors in those with substance use disorders may be particularly strong given the high comorbidity between mood and substance use disorders.13 Although it has not been examined thoroughly, independent mood disorders and substance - induced mood disorders are likely to confer risk
for suicide.
The
subsequent mediation analysis exploring anxiety and
depression as separate constructs provided additional support
for the hypothesis that self - compassion mediates the relationship between attachment and emotional distress.
Reliability was acceptable
for somatization (0.67) and
depression (0.70), poor
for anxiety (0.56) and unacceptable
for hostility (≤ 0.50), which was excluded from
subsequent analysis.
[jounal] Wei, M. / 2005 / Adult attachment, social self - efficacy, self - disclosure, loneliness and
subsequent depression for freshman college students: A longitudinal study / Journal of Counseling Psychology 52 (4): 602 ~ 614
One possible explanation
for this is that PEs may cause long - term problems with loss of trust in others, impaired self - confidence, and social isolation, and if these persist even if PEs do not, they could increase the risk of
subsequent depression.
Using repeated measures analysis
for four waves of data collection we use GEE to examine the extent to which symptoms of
depression predict
subsequent poor martial quality in women and poor marital quality predicts
subsequent depression.
Moreover, the authors found modest support
for externalizing, anxiety, and
depression symptoms to predict
subsequent sleep functioning, pointing to possible reciprocal, cascading processes.
All other psychosocial factors were explored by only two studies at most, with the exception of baseline anxiety and / or
depression which were either controlled
for or used to predict
subsequent distress by 11 of the 23 studies.