Depression link between fathers and teenage children

Depression in fathers, as well as mothers, has an impact on children despite mothers often being the focus when treating adolescent depression, a study suggests.

The University College London (UCL) report looked at 14,000 families in the UK and Ireland, according to BBC.

It said both parents had a role to play in preventing teenage depression.

The researchers encouraged more fathers to seek help for depressive symptoms by speaking to their doctor.

Dr Gemma Lewis from UCL, who led the study, said because mothers tended to spend more time with their children, there was often a tradition of “mother-blaming” when treating mental health issues in offspring.

But she said the research showed that “we should be bringing fathers into the picture more”.

Dr Lewis added: “If you’re a father who hasn’t sought treatment for your depression, it could have an impact on your child.

“We hope that our findings could encourage men who experience depression to speak to their doctor about it.”

The study is based on two large samples of the general population – 6,000 families from Ireland and nearly 8,000 from the UK – in which parents and children, at the ages of seven, nine and 13-14, filled in questionnaires about their feelings.

Children were asked about their emotional symptoms and parents also answered questions on their feelings, which were measured against a depression scale.

The results showed a link between depressive symptoms in fathers and similar symptoms in their adolescent children that was similar in size to the effect of a mother’s depression.

Many mental health problems, including depression, start at about the age of 13, the researchers said, and although depression in mothers was already known to increase the risk, the influence of fathers’ wellbeing was a new finding.

In the home, depressive symptoms can make mothers and fathers more prone to fatigue, more irritable and more likely to argue with their children.

“Children see the way their parents behave and act and this could bring on negative ways of thinking, which could then lead to depression,” Dr Lewis said.

The study concluded that fathers as well as mothers should be involved in tackling the problem of adolescent depression at an early stage.

It also highlighted the importance of treating depression in both parents.

 

 H.Z

 

You might also like
Latest news
Araqchi: We will stand with resistance in any situation Several officials inspect shelters that host Lebanese people in Damascus countryside Zionist enemy killed 25 civilians in yesterday’s airstrikes on various Lebanese areas Filippo Grandi: Israeli attacks on Lebanon have caused a terrible crisis PM discusses with Araghchi the Syrian-Iranian coordination to offer aid to the Lebanese people who c... Ryabkov: If US moves to resume nuclear tests, Moscow will respond in kind Zionist occupation detained 25 Palestinians in the West Bank President Al-Assad meets Iranian Foreign Minister Zionist occupation killed 41,825 Palestinian civilians since last October Cuba: The US is complicit in terrorist violence Iran urges an immediate stop to Western countries’ arms delivery to the Zionist regime Maduro affirms his country’s rejection of Israeli attacks against Palestinian and Lebanese peoples Sabbagh meets with Araghchi in Damascus WHO: 73 healthcare workers killed in Lebanon due to the ongoing zionist attacks Zionist occupation kills 8 Palestinian civilians in the central of Gaza Strip The Organization of Islamic Cooperation Calls for an Immediate Cessation of Israeli Aggression on Ga... Two Israeli Soldiers Killed in a Resistance Operation by a Drone Iraqi Resistance Targets Three Israeli Enemy Sites with Drones Araghchi: Iran Will Use All its Diplomatic Capacities to Support Lebanon and the Region to Confront ... Syria Condemns the Israeli Aggression on the International Road Between Lebanon and Syria and Calls ...