Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Life stressors driving teenage girls towards depression

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Oct, 2014 06:22 AM
    More and more teenage girls are falling into the depression trap and this may be the result of girls' greater exposure to stressful interpersonal events, making them more likely to ruminate.
     
    "Our findings draw our focus to the important role of stress as a potential causal factor in the development of vulnerabilities to depression, particularly among girls," said psychology researcher Jessica Hamilton from the Temple University, Philadelphia in the US.
     
    Teenagers who tend to interpret events in negative ways and who tend to focus on their thoughts following such events (rumination) are at greater risk of depression.
     
    Hamilton hypothesised that life stressors like fight with a family member or friend would ultimately increase a teenager's risk of depression.
     
    To reach the conclusion, researchers examined data from 382 adolescents participating in an ongoing longitudinal study.
     
    The adolescents completed self-report measures evaluating cognitive vulnerabilities and depressive symptoms at an initial assessment, and then completed three follow-up assessments, each spaced about seven months apart.
     
    As expected, girls tended to show more depressive symptoms at follow-up assessments than did boys.
     
    Girls also were exposed to a greater number of interpersonal dependent stressors during that time.
     
    "It is the exposure to stressors that maintained girls' higher levels of rumination and, thus, their risk for depression over time," researchers found.
     
    "Simply put, if boys and girls had been exposed to the same number of stressors, both would have been likely to develop rumination and negative cognitive styles," Hamilton explained.
     
    "Parents, educators and clinicians should understand that girls' greater exposure to interpersonal stressors places them at risk for vulnerability to depression and ultimately, depression itself," Hamilton noted.
     
    The findings were detailed in the journal Clinical Psychological Science.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Don't mix sexual fantasies with true love life

    Don't mix sexual fantasies with true love life
    Having sexual fantasies with your partner is not all that bad but people with high levels of psychopathic traits lean towards non-romantic sexual...

    Don't mix sexual fantasies with true love life

    Number crunching may make people selfish

    Number crunching may make people selfish
    People with a "calculative mindset" as a result of number crunching are more likely to engage in selfish and unethical behaviour, suggests a study....

    Number crunching may make people selfish

    How peers influence young adults' sexual habits

    How peers influence young adults' sexual habits
    According to significant research, awareness about how peers can affect young adults' sexual behaviours is important for parents, teachers...

    How peers influence young adults' sexual habits

    A happy wife means a happy life

    A happy wife means a happy life
    When it comes to a happy marriage, says an interesting study, the more content the wife is with the long-term union, the happier the husband...

    A happy wife means a happy life

    Why teenagers are more impulsive

    Why teenagers are more impulsive
    Does your teenage kid keep tweeting even during his/her studies? This may well be because teenagers are far more sensitive than adults to the immediate...

    Why teenagers are more impulsive

    Gambling is not all that bad, says study

    Gambling is not all that bad, says study
    Gambling is not always bad, especially for those who indulge in it for fun and are in control of their gambling habit, says a new study....

    Gambling is not all that bad, says study