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Journal Article

Citation

Luby J, Belden A, Sullivan J, Hayen R, McCadney A, Spitznagel E. J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry 2009; 50(9): 1156-1166.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1469-7610.2009.02077.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background: Empirical findings from two divergent bodies of literature illustrate that depression can arise in the preschool period and that the complex self‐conscious emotions of guilt and shame may develop normatively as early as age 3. Despite these related findings, few studies have examined whether the emotions of shame and guilt are salient in early childhood depression. This is important to further understand the emotional characteristics of preschool depression. Based on the hypothesis that preschool depression would be uniquely associated with higher levels of shame and maladaptive guilt, these emotions were investigated in a sample that included depressed, anxious, and disruptive disordered preschoolers as well as healthy peers using multiple methods.


Method: Structured psychiatric diagnoses were derived in a sample of N = 305 preschoolers ascertained from community sites. Preschoolers’ tendency to experience shame and guilt were explored using a story stem completion task coded by raters blind to symptoms and diagnosis of the subjects. Guilt experience and reparation behaviors were also measured using parent report.


Results: Based on preschooler’s emotion themes during the narrative tasks, gender, age, and depression severity predicted unique and significant portions of the variance in preschoolers’ expressions of shame. Parent report measures revealed that increasing depression severity was associated with children’s more frequent experiences of guilt feelings and less frequent attempts at guilt reparation (maladaptive guilt).


Conclusions: Findings demonstrated that high levels of shame and maladaptive guilt were related to preschool onset depression when using observational measures of children’s internal representations of their self‐conscious emotions as well as parent report. These findings demonstrate continuity of these core emotions of depression as early as age 3. These findings suggest that guilt and shame should be explored in clinical assessments of young children and may be an important focus for future studies of the developmental psychopathology of depression.

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