Author/Authors :
Yuan-Pang Wang، نويسنده , , Luciana Pajecki Lederman، نويسنده , , Laura Helena Andrade، نويسنده , , Clarice Gorenstein، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background Depression symptomatology
was assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory
(BDI) in a sample of Jewish adolescents, in order to
compare the frequency and severity of depression
with non-Jewish adolescents as well as examine gender
difference of the expression of depressive symptomatology.
Method Subjects comprised 475 students
from Jewish private schools, aged 13–17 years, who
were compared with an age-matched non-Jewish
sample (n = 899). Kendall’s definition was adopted to
classify these adolescents according to level of
depressive symptoms. The frequency of depression
was calculated for ethnicity, gender and age strata.
Discriminant analysis and principal component
analysis were performed to assess the importance of
depression-specific and non-specific items, along with
the factor structure of the BDI, respectively. Results
The overall mean score on the BDI in the Jewish and
the non-Jewish sample was 9.0 (SD = 6.4) and 8.6
(SD = 7.2), respectively. Jewish girls and boys had
comparable mean BDI scores, contrasting with non-
Jewish sample, where girls complained more of
depressive symptoms than boys (p < 0.001). The
frequency of depression, adopting a BDI cutoff of 20,
was 5.1% for the Jewish sample and 6.3% for the non-
Jewish sample. The frequency of depression for Jewish
girls and boys was 5.5% (SE = 1.4) and 4.6% (SE =
1.5), respectively. On the other hand, the frequency of
depression for non-Jewish girls and boys was 8.4%
(SE = 1.2) and 4.0% (SE = 1.0), respectively. The
female/male ratio of frequency of BDI-depression was
1.2 in the Jewish sample, but non-Jewish girls were
twice (2.1) as likely to report depression as boys.
Discriminant analysis showed that the BDI highly
discriminates depressive symptomatology among
Jewish adolescents, and measured specific aspects of
depression. Factor analysis revealed two meaningful
factors for the total sample and each gender (cognitive-
affective dimension and somatic dimension),
evidencing a difference between Jewish boys and
Jewish girls in the symptomatic expression of
depression akin to non-Jewish counterparts. Conclusions
Ethnic-cultural factor might play a role in the
frequency, severity and symptomatic expression of
depressive symptoms in Jewish adolescents. The lack
of gender effect on depression, which might persist
from adolescence to adulthood among Jewish people,
should be investigated in prospective studies.