Paternal Depressive Symptoms and Adolescent Functioning: The Moderating Effect of Gender and Father Hostility

scientific article published on January 1, 2010

Paternal Depressive Symptoms and Adolescent Functioning: The Moderating Effect of Gender and Father Hostility is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.3149/FTH.0801.131
P953full work available at URLhttps://doi.org/10.3149/fth.0801.131
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2911154
https://europepmc.org/articles/pmc2911154?pdf=render
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2911154?pdf=render
P932PMC publication ID2911154
P698PubMed publication ID20671810
P5875ResearchGate publication ID45424531

P2093author name stringKatherine J. Conger
Ben T. Reeb
Ed Y. Wu
P2860cites workClinical implications of "subthreshold" depressive symptomsQ30885793
Risk for psychopathology in the children of depressed mothers: a developmental model for understanding mechanisms of transmissionQ33723026
The role of rumination in depressive disorders and mixed anxiety/depressive symptomsQ33919971
Family processes in adolescent depressionQ34270879
Gender differences in personality: a meta-analysisQ34315059
Natural history of Diagnostic Interview Schedule/DSM-IV major depression. The Baltimore Epidemiologic Catchment Area follow-upQ34445993
Post-hoc probing of significant moderational and mediational effects in studies of pediatric populations.Q34451143
The association between psychopathology in fathers versus mothers and children's internalizing and externalizing behavior problems: a meta-analysisQ34806361
Adolescent depression: description, causes, and interventionsQ36342980
Adolescents' relationships with their mothers and fathers: associations with depressive disorder and subdiagnostic symptomatologyQ36474210
The unique effect of paternal depressive symptoms on adolescent functioning: associations with gender and father-adolescent relationship closenessQ37382838
Sex differences in the familial transmission of mood disordersQ40313475
Maternal depression and child developmentQ40743341
Predictors and consequences of childhood depressive symptoms: a 5-year longitudinal studyQ41111253
Where's poppa? The relative lack of attention to the role of fathers in child and adolescent psychopathologyQ41117730
Continuity of depression during the transition to adulthood: a 5-year longitudinal study of young womenQ41679147
Maternal depressive symptoms and depressive symptoms in adolescentsQ44899815
Understanding the sex difference in vulnerability to adolescent depression: an examination of child and parent characteristicsQ45225491
Economic stress, parenting, and child adjustment in Mexican American and European American familiesQ46109228
Perceptions of the parent-adolescent relationship: a longitudinal investigationQ48464296
The relations among depression in fathers, children's psychopathology, and father-child conflict: a meta-analysisQ48535901
Gender-specific pathways between maternal depressive symptoms, family discord, and adolescent adjustmentQ48744984
Major depressive disorder in older adolescents: prevalence, risk factors, and clinical implications.Q50856088
Family functioning and children's adjustment: associations among parents' depressed mood, marital hostility, parent-child hostility, and children's adjustment.Q50955212
A family process model of economic hardship and adjustment of early adolescent boys.Q51150443
Sex differences in adolescent depression: stress exposure and reactivity models.Q51764353
Subthreshold depression in adolescence and mental health outcomes in adulthood.Q51934325
Parental major depression and the risk of depression and other mental disorders in offspring: a prospective-longitudinal community study.Q51958417
Adolescent depression: Why more girls?Q52050797
Parent–child interaction among depressed fathers and mothers: Impact on child functioningQ60622670
Sex differences and adolescent depressionQ68717298
Adolescent depression and risk factorsQ77567518
P433issue1
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectteenagerQ1492760
P304page(s)131-142
P577publication date2010-01-01
P1433published inFatheringQ5437701
P1476titlePaternal Depressive Symptoms and Adolescent Functioning: The Moderating Effect of Gender and Father Hostility
P478volume8

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q48040714A Longitudinal Study of Fathers' and Young Children's Depressive Symptoms.
Q50608121Associations of mother's and father's parenting practices with children's observed social reticence in a competitive situation: a monozygotic twin difference study.
Q44392313Characteristics of fathers with depressive symptoms
Q37812198Distressed fathers and their children: A review of the literature
Q43977535Fathers' mental health as a protective factor in the relationship between maternal and child depressive symptoms
Q35148511Long-term Effects of Fathers' Depressed Mood on Youth Internalizing Symptoms in Early Adulthood.
Q48348643Longitudinal course of diagnosed depression from ages 15 to 20 in a community sample: patterns and parental risk factors
Q48290389Maternal and paternal psychosocial risk factors for clinical depression in a Norwegian community sample of adolescents
Q58436633Parental Psychopathology Levels as a Moderator of Temperament and Oppositional Defiant Disorder Symptoms in Preschoolers
Q34418860Parental depressive symptoms and adolescent adjustment: a prospective test of an explanatory model for the role of marital conflict
Q33899151Paternal Hostility and Maternal Hostility in European American and African American Families
Q35585589The Moderating Effects of Mother-Adolescent Relations on the Longitudinal Association between Father and Offspring Depressive Symptoms
Q39545969The association between parent PTSD/depression symptoms and child PTSD symptoms: a meta-analysis
Q47447077The association between paternal and adolescent depressive symptoms: evidence from two population-based cohorts
Q93070492The unique effects of maternal and paternal depressive symptoms on youth's symptomatology: Moderation by family ethnicity, family structure, and child gender

Search more.