Depressive symptoms and anger and aggression in Russian adolescents
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/32007Date
2023-11-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Ruchkin, Vladislav; Stickley, Andrew; Koposov, Roman Alexandriovich; Sukhodolsky, D; Isaksson, JohanAbstract
Research among adolescents exploring the association between depressive symptoms and aggression has
produced inconsistent findings. This study investigated the prevalence of clinically significant (current major
depressive episode) and subthreshold depressive symptoms in a general population sample of adolescents
from Northern Russia and explored their association with aggression and anger, while controlling for comorbid
mental health problems. The sample consisted of 2600 participants, aged 13–17 years (59.5% female; 95.7% ethnic
Russian). Symptoms of a current major depressive episode, types of anger and aggression (anger rumination, trait
anger, physical, verbal and social aggression) and comorbid problems (posttraumatic stress, alcohol use, anxiety,
and hyperactivity/impulsivity) were assessed by means of self-reports. The prevalence of a clinically significant
depressive episode in the past month was 3.5%, while for subthreshold depression it was 21.6%. All anger and
aggression variables, as well as comorbid problems increased together with increasing levels of depression. The
association between overt aggressive behavior and depression was primarily explained by comorbid mental
health problems, whereas anger rumination and social aggression had more direct associations with depression,
independent of comorbidity. Among adolescents with depression, boys reported higher levels of social and verbal
aggression and of anger rumination than girls. The results of this study suggest that interventions aiming to reduce
aggressive behavior in adolescents should consider depression and its comorbid conditions.
Publisher
BMCCitation
Ruchkin V, Stickley A, Koposov RA, Sukhodolsky D, Isaksson J. Depressive symptoms and anger and aggression in Russian adolescents. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health (CAPMH). 2023;17(1)Metadata
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