Mother's self-reports from pregnancy to her child's toddlerhood as predictors of her child's depressive symptomatology in early adolescence.

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Authors

BOUŠA Ondřej MASOPUSTOVÁ Zuzana JEŽEK Stanislav

Year of publication 2012
Type Article in Proceedings
Conference European Conference on Developmental Psychology, 23. – 27. 8. 2011, Bergen, Norway.
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Social Studies

Citation
Field Psychology
Keywords Depressive feelings; early predictors; adolescence
Description Experiencing depressive feelings is considered normal during adolescence. This study focuses on early predictors of experiencing depressive symptomatology in early adolescence (age 13). The general guestion is whether mother's behavior and feelings towards her child and her experience of negative life events can predict the child's depressive symptomatology later on. The data have been collected within a wider longitudinal cohort study (European Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood – Czech leg) starting at mother's pregnancy. An adapted Czech version of Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ) was used to measure adolescent depressive symptomatology (N=605). Mothers' reports from pregnancy to toddlerhood included mothers' feelings and behavior toward the child, her experience of negative life events during this period, her marital satisfaction, etc. Regression analysis revealed that the depressive symptomatology in early adolescence is associated with mother's feelings and behavior toward the child in the child's early development.
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