Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6788532 | Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2018 | 38 Pages |
Abstract
In dyads comprised of depressed mothers and school-age children with internalizing disorders, children improved when mothers improved, but not among those whose mothers who had histories of sexual abuse or physical neglect. Increased use of positive parenting strategies among mothers accounted for lagged relationships between improvement in maternal depressive symptoms and improvement in child functioning. This pattern was not, however, observed among mothers with childhood histories of emotional neglect. Interventions that directly enhance positive parenting and more rapidly change these behaviors may hasten improvement in offspring. Offspring of depressed mothers with histories of early trauma are at high risk for poor outcomes, even when their mothers receive depression treatment.
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Authors
Holly A. Swartz, Jill M. Cyranowski, Yu Cheng, Marlissa Amole,