Publication | Closed Access
Nonpsychotic postpartum depression among adolescent mothers.
175
Citations
41
References
1990
Year
Minor DepressionTeenage PregnancyMental HealthChild Mental HealthSocial SciencesMood SymptomClinical DepressionPsychiatryDepressionMaternal HealthNonpsychotic Postpartum DepressionMood SpectrumPediatricsMajor DepressionFamily PsychologyMood DisordersMedicineChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
This study examined the extent to which childbearing increases vulnerability to clinical depression and depressive symptomatology among primiparous adolescent girls (ages 14 to 18). Childbearing Ss (n = 128) were assessed during pregnancy, 6 weeks postpartum, and 1 year postpartum. Matched nonchildbearing Ss (n = 114) were assessed at corresponding time points. Six weeks postpartum, 6% of the childbearing adolescents met Research Diagnostic Criteria for major depression and 20% for minor depression. These rates were not significantly different from those found for nonchildbearing Ss (4% major depression, 10% minor depression). However, higher rates of somatic symptoms of depression were found among the childbearing Ss than among the nonchildbearing Ss.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1