Sentences with phrase «predicting adolescent depressive symptoms»

Predicted means for the adolescent reported maternal firm control × age interactions predicting adolescent depressive symptoms and adolescent self - efficacy for diabetes management.
Results indicated that maternal positive and negative parenting significantly concurrently predicted adolescent depressive symptoms at all three waves, whereas TaqIA polymorphism had no main effect on depressive symptoms.

Not exact matches

• Conversely, among adolescents, insecure attachments with both parents predict depressive symptoms (Kamkar et al, 2012).
Maternal and paternal support, in turn, were negatively predicted by previous levels of adolescent depressive symptoms.
Guided by the Behavioral Vaccine Theory of prevention, this study uses a no - control group design to examine intervention variables that predict favorable changes in depressive symptoms at the six - to - eight week follow - up in at - risk adolescents who participated in a primary care, Internet - based prevention program.
Consistent with the literature on child and adolescent development (Papp, Cummings, & Goeke - Morey, 2005), we predicted that maternal acceptance would be associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms, higher self - efficacy, and better adherence.
We predicted that firm control would be associated with lower depressive symptoms, better adherence, and higher self - efficacy for younger adolescents, who are age - appropriately more dependent on their parents.
Recently, it was reported that only academic self - efficacy, and not social self - efficacy, predicted depressive symptoms at 6 to 8 months follow - up in adolescents from fifth to eight grade, when controlling for shared variance of academic and social self - efficacy (Scott and Dearing 2012).
Regression analysis was used to predict group differences in depressive symptoms, substance use, and health complaints of specific biracial / ethnic identification groups as compared with adolescents identifying as monoracial in one or the other racial / ethnic category, while controlling for complex sampling design, mother» s education, single parent family, and student» s grade.
Conversely, higher adolescent depressive symptoms predicted lower parental knowledge, adolescent disclosure, and parental solicitation over time, highlighting the bidirectional nature of associations among parenting factors and adolescent depressive symptoms.
Predicted depressive symptom scores as a function of perceived control and dependent interpersonal stress in Canadian adolescents
In a community sample of mother - adolescent dyads, less emotional flexibility of mother - child dyads during conflict interactions in early adolescence predicted more anxiety and depressive symptoms of adolescents 5 years later (Van der Giessen et al. 2015).
Mothers» and fathers» physical punishment of their adolescents» ages 12 and 14 predicted increased misconduct and depressive symptoms among these adolescents at ages 14 and 16.
These findings support the idea that the way adolescents identify with their cultural values predicts subsequent depressive symptoms.
Separate models for each relationship quality variable (adolescent - reported mother and father acceptance, adolescent - and mother - reported diabetes conflicts with mothers, and adolescent - reported diabetes conflicts with fathers) predicting each outcome (HbA1c, mother - and adolescent - reported adherence, depressive symptoms) resulted in 20 total regressions.
The current study assessed the relative importance of conduct problems and depressive symptoms, measured at two ages (11 and 15), for predicting substance use at age 15 in an unselected birth cohort of New Zealand adolescents.
The purpose of this study was (a) to identify latent subgroups of Taiwanese adolescents who vary in their cultural value affiliations and (b) to examine how latent - subgroup membership in early adolescence predicted depressive symptoms for 6 years throughout adolescence into young adulthood.
Adolescent misconduct, but not depressive symptoms, at ages 12 and 14 predicted increased physical punishment by their parents at ages 14 and 16.
As hypothesized, multiple relational stressors were found to predict the future development of depressive symptoms, but as hypothesized predictions existed primarily for adolescents who were highly rejection sensitive.
Findings suggest that interpersonal stressors, including the particularly detrimental stressors of peer victimization and familial emotional maltreatment, may predict both depressive and social anxiety symptoms; however, adolescents who have more immediate depressogenic reactions may be at greater risk for later development of symptoms of social anxiety.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z