Depressive and Disruptive Disorders and Mental Health Service Utilization in Children and Adolescents
Research on the prevention of depressive symptoms in children and adolescents was reviewed and synthesized with meta-analysis.
Research on the prevention of depressive symptoms in children and adolescents was reviewed and synthesized with meta-analysis.
Elementary school students (n = 330) and their parents (n = 228) participated in a 3-year longitudinal study of the temporal relation between anxiety and depressive symptoms in children.
Reviewed 60 studies of depressive symptoms among children and adolescents with chronic medical problems.
Families, as social systems, can be considered “resilient” in ways that parallel descriptions of individual resilience.
Mortality among black infants in the United States is approximately twice that among white infants.
Fathers have been neglected in investigations of the development, prevention, and treatment of anxiety and anxiety disorders in children and adolescents.
An overview of a research-informed family resilience framework, developed as a conceptual map to guide clinical intervention and prevention efforts with vulnerable families is presented.
Compared with resident fathers, nonresident fathers are more likely to be unemployed or underemployed and less likely, when they are employed, to have access to flexible work arrangements.
Often undetected and poorly managed, maternal depression and child adjustment problems are common health problems and impose significant burden to society.
Regular family meal times have been associated with enhanced family cohesion and positive developmental outcomes for children–youth, especially in White and/or middle-class families.