Examining the association of familial and social stress, trauma, and support on mood, anxiety, and behavioral symptoms and diagnoses in youth at risk for bipolar disorder and controls

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Titel: Examining the association of familial and social stress, trauma, and support on mood, anxiety, and behavioral symptoms and diagnoses in youth at risk for bipolar disorder and controls
Autoren: Kamali, M, Stapp, EK, Fullerton, JM, Ghaziuddin, N, Hulvershorn, L, McInnis, MG, Mitchell, PB, Roberts, G, Wilcox, HC, Nurnberger, JI
Quelle: Journal of Affective Disorders. 363:79-89
Verlagsinformationen: Elsevier BV, 2024.
Publikationsjahr: 2024
Schlagwörter: Male, Adult, Bipolar Disorder, Adolescent, Social Determinants of Health, At-risk, Behavioral Symptoms, Anxiety, Stress, Trauma, Severity of Illness Index, Life events, anzsrc-for: 52 Psychology, Life Change Events, Young Adult, Clinical Research, 2.3 Psychological, Risk Factors, Behavioral and Social Science, Humans, anzsrc-for: 17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences, Child, Pediatric, anzsrc-for: 42 Health Sciences, Depression, 42 Health Sciences, Social Support, 3 Good Health and Well Being, 4203 Health Services and Systems, Serious Mental Illness, Mental Illness, Anxiety Disorders, Brain Disorders, anzsrc-for: 4203 Health Services and Systems, anzsrc-for: 5203 Clinical and Health Psychology, anzsrc-for: 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences, Affect, Mental Health, anzsrc-for: 11 Medical and Health Sciences, 52 Psychology, 5203 Clinical and Health Psychology, Psychological, Female, social and economic factors, Stress, Psychological
Beschreibung: Youth with a family history of bipolar disorder (At-Risk) have a higher risk of developing psychiatric disorders and experiencing environmental stressors than youth without such family history (Control). We studied the differential associations of familial and environmental factors on developing psychiatric diagnoses and symptoms, in At-Risk and Control youth.At-Risk and Control youth (N = 466, ages 9-22) were systematically assessed for severity of symptoms, psychiatric diagnoses, and self-reported measures of stress and social support. We tested the association of family history and measures of stress or support with symptom severity and diagnoses.At-Risk youth had higher symptom severity scores and were more frequently diagnosed with psychiatric disorders (all p values
Publikationsart: Article
Sprache: English
ISSN: 0165-0327
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2024.07.125
Zugangs-URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39038624
Rights: Elsevier TDM
CC BY
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....ee75b85c611d35b33722d558720318c6
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:Youth with a family history of bipolar disorder (At-Risk) have a higher risk of developing psychiatric disorders and experiencing environmental stressors than youth without such family history (Control). We studied the differential associations of familial and environmental factors on developing psychiatric diagnoses and symptoms, in At-Risk and Control youth.At-Risk and Control youth (N = 466, ages 9-22) were systematically assessed for severity of symptoms, psychiatric diagnoses, and self-reported measures of stress and social support. We tested the association of family history and measures of stress or support with symptom severity and diagnoses.At-Risk youth had higher symptom severity scores and were more frequently diagnosed with psychiatric disorders (all p values
ISSN:01650327
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2024.07.125