Title of article :
Deviant Peer Affiliations and Depression:
Confounding or Causation?
Author/Authors :
David M. Fergusson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Data gathered from 2 longitudinal studies (the Christchurch Health and Development study of a birth
cohort of 1,265 New Zealand participants studied to 21 years and the Quebec Study of 240 Canadian
participants studied to 13 years) was used to examine the linkages between deviant peer affiliations
and depression in adolescence. Both studies produced similar conclusions:
a) increasing peer affiliations were associated with significant (p < :0001) increases in
depressive symptoms;
b) the associations between peer affiliations and depression could not be fully explained by
confounding factors; and
c) peer affiliations and depressive symptoms were linked by a causal chain process in which
deviant peer affiliations led to increased externalizing behaviors with the negative consequences
of these behaviors leading to depression.
Keywords :
peer affiliations , adolescence , depression , Longitudinal. , deviancy
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology