Childhood psychopathology retrospectively assessed among adults with early onset major depression
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Cited by (53)
Early intervention for depression in young people: a blind spot in mental health care
2019, The Lancet PsychiatryCitation Excerpt :We define this as severe depression with suicidal thoughts and behaviours; non-anxiety comorbid disorders, including personality disorders, substance use disorders, and autism spectrum disorder; and poor psychosocial functioning.35 The presence of these factors predict recurrent and persistent depression for: severity,36–38 suicidality,28,36 personality pathology,39,40 substance use,36,41,42 and poor functioning.43,44 The number of young people diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder has increased over the past decade, mainly because of the inclusion of milder cases within the diagnostic spectrum.45
Cognitive-behavioral therapy for child anxiety confers long-term protection from suicidality
2015, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent PsychiatryPredictors of relapse in patients with major depressive disorder in a 52-week, fixed dose, double blind, randomized trial of selegiline transdermal system (STS)
2013, Journal of Affective DisordersCitation Excerpt :Notwithstanding these limitations, suicide attempts or suicidal ideation during the index episode have been found to predict relapse in MDD (Lewinsohn et al., 1994; Barkow et al., 2003). While comorbid psychopathology such as dysthymia (Warner et al., 1992; Barkow et al., 2003), anxiety disorders (Wilhelm et al., 1999) and substance use disorders (Coryell et al., 1991; Alpert et al., 1994; Barkow et al., 2003) have been found to increase relapse risk in MDD, few studies have examined the role of comorbid eating disorders and the findings have not been consistent. Eating disorders have high rates (range between 50% and 75%) of comorbidity with MDD (American Psychiatric Association, 2006) and comorbid MDD and ED have been associated with adverse ED outcomes (Lowe et al., 2001; Berkman et al., 2007).
Depression mediates the relationship between obsessive-compulsive symptoms and eating disorder symptoms in an inpatient sample
2012, Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related DisordersCitation Excerpt :Consideration of the temporal precedence of the onset of OCD, depression, and eating disorders also appears to support depression as a potential mediator. For example, research suggests that depression typically precedes the onset of eating disorders (e.g., Deep, Nagy, Weltzin, Rao, & Kaye, 1995), OCD typically precedes the onset of eating disorders (e.g., Anderluh et al., 2003; Kaye et al., 2004), and the onset of OCD typically precedes that of depression (e.g., Alpert, Maddocks, Rosenbaum, & Fava, 1994). Based on these findings, the present study employed structural equation modeling to examine the extent to which the association between symptoms of OCD and eating disorders is mediated by symptoms of depression in an inpatient sample of eating disorder patients.
Risk for recurrence in depression
2007, Clinical Psychology ReviewDifferentiating symptoms of social anxiety and depression in adults with social anxiety disorder
2005, Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental PsychiatryCitation Excerpt :Despite general support for the tripartite model (e.g., Brown, Chorpita, & Barlow, 1998; Joiner, 1996; Joiner, Cantanzaro, & Laurent, 1996; Watson et al., 1995a, b), there is evidence that social anxiety disorder, as well as depression, may be characterized by anhedonia (Brown et al., 1998; Watson, Clark, & Carey, 1988), suggesting that measures of anhedonia or low positive affect may not differentiate the two disorders. Given the high degree of symptom and diagnostic comorbidity between social anxiety and depression (Alpert et al., 1999; Alpert, Maddocks, Rosenbaum, & Fava, 1994; Kessler et al., 1996; Kessler, Stang, Wittchen, Stein, & Walters, 1999; Schneier, Johnson, Hornig, Liebowitz, & Weissman, 1992; Van Ameringen, Mancini, Styan, & Donison, 1991; Zimmerman, McDermut, & Mattia, 2000), it is important for researchers to be able to validly discriminate between the two disorders. Specifically, it is important to determine whether measures of social anxiety and depressive symptoms assess the constructs of interest rather than simply assessing shared symptoms of negative affect.