Children whose mothers have depression are less likely to develop behavioral problems if their fathers are actively engaged in family life
Children whose mothers have depression are less likely
to develop behavioral problems if their fathers are actively engaged in family
life, according to an article in the July issue of the Archives of Pediatric and
Adolescent Medicine.
It is well documented that children living in homes with
depressed mothers are at increased risk of developing problems such as aggression,
hyperactivity, depression and anxiety. However, an involved father - one who has
a positive relationship with his children - may reduce the risk of those behaviors.
The 10-year, population-based study was the first to
examine a father’s role in a household with a depressed mother.
“My study corroborates findings from previous research
that a child is at increased risk of problem behaviors when the mother is depressed,”
said Jen Jen Chang, PhD, assistant professor of community health in epidemiology
at the Saint Louis University School of Public Health and principal investigator.
“But once we factored in a father’s positive involvement,
I observed that the adverse impact of the mother’s depression was attenuated.
The father served as a buffer. He may have engaged with the children when the
mother wasn’t available due to her illness.”
The level of a father’s involvement was based on questions
given to children age 10 years and older. Investigators asked the children how
often their father talked over important decisions with them; whether he listened
to their side of an argument; whether he knew where they were when not at home;
whether their father missed events or activities that were important to them;
and how close they felt to their father.
Chang’s study is unprecedented not only because it examined
a father’s role in a household with a depressed mother but because it followed
the children with multiple assessments throughout childhood and adolescence in
a continuous context.
Chang said results of her study have important implications
for intervention.
“I would advocate for health professionals to educate parents, specifically fathers,
to be more involved with their children when their wives are diagnosed with depression.
Mothers play an important role in a child’s life. When she’s mentally ill, the
child is going to have difficulty, the whole family suffers. Fathers are in a
position to negate that but may need a health professional’s guidance.”
Chang next plans to study the effect of a mother’s depression
on a child’s risk of substance abuse and whether a father’s positive involvement
in a child’s life may reduce this risk.
|