Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.

INTRODUCTION:Depression is a public health concern among youth, and it is pertinent to identify factors that can help prevent development of depressive symptoms in adolescence. This study aimed to investigate the association between negative life events and depressive symptoms among adolescents, and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kristin Gärtner Askeland, Tormod Bøe, Kyrre Breivik, Annette M La Greca, Børge Sivertsen, Mari Hysing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234109
id doaj-83dcbdcbe4bc4f99a10d006c72ce0d78
record_format Article
spelling doaj-83dcbdcbe4bc4f99a10d006c72ce0d782021-03-03T21:50:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01156e023410910.1371/journal.pone.0234109Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.Kristin Gärtner AskelandTormod BøeKyrre BreivikAnnette M La GrecaBørge SivertsenMari HysingINTRODUCTION:Depression is a public health concern among youth, and it is pertinent to identify factors that can help prevent development of depressive symptoms in adolescence. This study aimed to investigate the association between negative life events and depressive symptoms among adolescents, and to examine the influence and relative contributions of personal, social and family protective factors related to resilience. METHODS:Data stem from the cross-sectional youth@hordaland-survey, conducted in Hordaland, Norway. In all, 9,546 adolescents, aged 16-19 years old (52.8% girls) provided self-report information on depressive symptoms, negative life events and protective factors related to resilience. RESULTS:Experiencing a higher number of negative life events was related to increases in depressive symptoms, while the potential protective factors goal orientation, self-confidence, social competence, social support, and family cohesion individually were associated with fewer symptoms. Although there were small moderating effects of goal orientation and self-confidence, the results mainly supported a compensatory resilience model. When considering the potential protective factors jointly, only self-confidence and family cohesion were significantly associated with fewer depressive symptoms for both genders, with the addition of social support for girls. There were significant interactions between all the potential protective factors and gender, indicating a greater reduction of depressive symptoms with higher levels of protective factors among girls. CONCLUSIONS:Interventions aimed at fostering self-confidence and family cohesion could be effective in preventing depressive symptoms for adolescent boys and girls, regardless of their exposure to negative events. Results further indicate that preventive interventions targeting these potential protective factors could be especially beneficial for adolescent girls.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234109
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristin Gärtner Askeland
Tormod Bøe
Kyrre Breivik
Annette M La Greca
Børge Sivertsen
Mari Hysing
spellingShingle Kristin Gärtner Askeland
Tormod Bøe
Kyrre Breivik
Annette M La Greca
Børge Sivertsen
Mari Hysing
Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kristin Gärtner Askeland
Tormod Bøe
Kyrre Breivik
Annette M La Greca
Børge Sivertsen
Mari Hysing
author_sort Kristin Gärtner Askeland
title Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.
title_short Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.
title_full Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.
title_fullStr Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.
title_full_unstemmed Life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: Protective factors associated with resilience.
title_sort life events and adolescent depressive symptoms: protective factors associated with resilience.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description INTRODUCTION:Depression is a public health concern among youth, and it is pertinent to identify factors that can help prevent development of depressive symptoms in adolescence. This study aimed to investigate the association between negative life events and depressive symptoms among adolescents, and to examine the influence and relative contributions of personal, social and family protective factors related to resilience. METHODS:Data stem from the cross-sectional youth@hordaland-survey, conducted in Hordaland, Norway. In all, 9,546 adolescents, aged 16-19 years old (52.8% girls) provided self-report information on depressive symptoms, negative life events and protective factors related to resilience. RESULTS:Experiencing a higher number of negative life events was related to increases in depressive symptoms, while the potential protective factors goal orientation, self-confidence, social competence, social support, and family cohesion individually were associated with fewer symptoms. Although there were small moderating effects of goal orientation and self-confidence, the results mainly supported a compensatory resilience model. When considering the potential protective factors jointly, only self-confidence and family cohesion were significantly associated with fewer depressive symptoms for both genders, with the addition of social support for girls. There were significant interactions between all the potential protective factors and gender, indicating a greater reduction of depressive symptoms with higher levels of protective factors among girls. CONCLUSIONS:Interventions aimed at fostering self-confidence and family cohesion could be effective in preventing depressive symptoms for adolescent boys and girls, regardless of their exposure to negative events. Results further indicate that preventive interventions targeting these potential protective factors could be especially beneficial for adolescent girls.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234109
work_keys_str_mv AT kristingartneraskeland lifeeventsandadolescentdepressivesymptomsprotectivefactorsassociatedwithresilience
AT tormodbøe lifeeventsandadolescentdepressivesymptomsprotectivefactorsassociatedwithresilience
AT kyrrebreivik lifeeventsandadolescentdepressivesymptomsprotectivefactorsassociatedwithresilience
AT annettemlagreca lifeeventsandadolescentdepressivesymptomsprotectivefactorsassociatedwithresilience
AT børgesivertsen lifeeventsandadolescentdepressivesymptomsprotectivefactorsassociatedwithresilience
AT marihysing lifeeventsandadolescentdepressivesymptomsprotectivefactorsassociatedwithresilience
_version_ 1714814804164608000