Teenage Depression Study
Q: ... Resources on. Teen Depression. Also visit Teen Suicide. Click
here to find out
if your child is at-risk, displaying self-destructive behaviors,
and needs your ...
Description: Resources and information on depression in teens and
in families, including research articles and...
http://www.focusas.com/Depression.html
A:This is a place for teens to come together and talk about
depression. I have made this page because I have not found
another page that focuses on teenage depression although it is a
real problem. I myself am 14 years old and depressed. I have put
a message board in which we can all post and help each other.
Please feel free to post on it. Also feel free to e-mail me,
there is a link to email me with to the left.
http://www.geocities.com/pood_72581/
... Source: Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance - United States,
1999. Signs and symptoms of teen depression. ...
http://www2.healthnet.com/adap/teachers/forteachers.asp
"Having a depressive episode as a teen more than doubled the risk
of having another depressive episode in young adulthood," says
Ian H. Gotlib, PhD, co-author of the study. The study also found
that only about one in four people who had been diagnosed with
depression as teens said they remained free of psychiatric
illness in early adulthood.
"As a general rule of thumb, depression in adolescence seems to
be underdiagnosed and underappreciated," says Robert L. Findling,
MD, of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, who
commented on the study for WebMD. "We are quite aware that this
is a malignant and potentially lethal disorder. The leading cause
of death in young people is suicide. But the earlier the disorder
is caught, the less malignant it is, just like any disorder in
medicine.
"There's a lack of appreciation that depression is a
dysregulation of mood, just as diabetes is a dysregulation of
blood sugar," Findling says. "We see youngsters with profound
disturbances in function who suffer needlessly because parents or
other well-meaning adults say it's part of being a teen-ager or
it's just a phase."
Depression should be distinguished from common sadness, says
Gotlib: "Some warning signs are loss of interest, sadness,
fatigue, concentration difficulties, sleep disturbances, and
appetite problems that last for at least two weeks." But, he
cautions, "it's important not to overreact if you see sadness for
a few days in an adolescent."
For more than 10 years, doctors have been studying a group of
1,700 Oregon teen-agers, aged 14 to 18, who were randomly
selected from nine high schools. The doctors originally wanted to
find out how common depression and other mental disorders were in
this group of "normal" teen-agers. In this study, published in
the American Journal of Psychiatry, they focused on teens who
originally were found to be depressed but had recovered when
questioned again a year later to see what happened to them as
they got older. These subjects were interviewed by phone around
the time of their 24th birthdays.
Of the 274 formerly depressed patients, only about 30% said they
were free of psychiatric disorders, while about 45% said they had
had at least one recurrence of depression. According to Gotlib,
the risk of having had a depressive episode at age 24 for people
who did not have depression as teens is 18%.
That