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Family and Contextual Predictors of Depressive Symptoms in Inner-City African American Youth

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Abstract

Family and contextual predictors of depression in inner-city, African American youth have rarely been examined. In this study we explore the contribution of current and historical life events, family conflict, perceived social support from mother, maternal depression, and maternal explanatory style to the depressive symptoms of inner-city African American school-age (M = 10.7 years) children. Home interviews were conducted with 89 mother and child dyads living in moderate- to high-violent areas of a southeastern city. Regression analyses revealed that the children in this sample with higher levels of depressive symptoms had higher levels of child-reported everyday stress, were more likely to have been abused at some point in their past, came from homes with mothers who were less well educated, and had mothers who reported higher levels of depression, a past history of domestic abuse, as well as a less pessimistic explanatory style. Implications for interventions with inner-city African American families are discussed.

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Correspondence to Wendy Kliewer.

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Johnson, P.D., Kliewer, W. Family and Contextual Predictors of Depressive Symptoms in Inner-City African American Youth. Journal of Child and Family Studies 8, 181–192 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1022087801526

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1022087801526

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