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Journal Article

Citation

Jenkins JH, Sanchez G, Miller EA, Santillanes Allande NI, Urano G, Pryor AJ. Int. J. Soc. Psychiatry 2022; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/00207640221140282

PMID

36529994

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Depression and anxiety-related disorders are common among adolescents. Research attention to early adolescence and low-income ethnically diverse populations is limited.

AIM: To conduct screening for depression and anxiety at an early age with attention to gender and socioenvironmental context within a low-income setting.

METHOD: Mixed methods included the PHQ-9A and GAD-10 screening instruments and ethnographic interviews.

RESULTS: 75 ethnically diverse middle school students were included. Mean years age was 11.2 (0.74). Females had higher PHQ-9A sum scores than males (p = .002, Mann-Whitney test) and higher GAD-10 sum scores than males (p = .016, Mann-Whitney test). After controlling for multiple comparisons, girls had higher mean responses on three PHQ-9A items (p < .006, two-sided t-test) and only one GAD-10 item (p < .005, two-sided t-test). Ethnographic interviews revealed contexts associated with girls' experiences of depression and anxiety, including gender-based violence in both school and home environments. Salient for girls and boys alike were worries about consequences of COVID-19 for family with respect to illness, death, job loss, economic hardship. Fears over student perceptions of intensified discrimination and racism in school and community were prominent. These problems were experienced by students as barriers to educational engagement.

CONCLUSION: Specific attention to early adolescence is needed to identify emergence of subsyndromal conditions which may benefit from therapeutic attention to reduce symptom severity, identify sociocultural, structural, and gender-specific stressors, and to enhance educational engagement.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescents; gender; COVID-19; anxiety; depression; ethnographic mixed methods; global mental health

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