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Hallfors D.D.; Waller M.W.; Bauer D.; Ford C.A.; and Halpern C.T. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, vol. 29, issue 3, pgs. 163-170 (2005) BACKGROUND: The notion that adolescents "self-medicate" depression with
substance use and sexual behaviors is widespread, but the temporal ordering of
depression and these risk behaviors is not clear. This study tests whether
gender-specific patterns of substance use and sexual behavior precede and
predict depression or vice versa.
METHODS: Data are from the National
Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, weighted to produce population
estimates. The sample includes 13,491 youth, grades 7 to 11, interviewed in 1995
and again 1 year later. Multivariate logistic regression analyses, conducted in
2004, tested temporal ordering, controlling for covariates. The main outcome
measures were depression, as measured by a modified Center for Epidemiological
Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D), and three behavior patterns: (1) abstaining
from sexual intercourse and drug use, (2) experimental behavior patterns, and
(3) high-risk behavior patterns.
RESULTS: Overall, sex and drug behavior
predicted an increased likelihood of depression, but depression did not predict
behavior. Among girls, both experimental and high-risk behavior patterns
predicted depression. Among boys, only high-risk behavior patterns increased the
odds of later depression. Depression did not predict behavior in boys, or
experimental behavior in girls; but it decreased the odds of high-risk behavior
among abstaining girls (RRR=0.14) and increased the odds of high-risk behavior
(RRR=2.68) among girls already experimenting with substance use.
CONCLUSIONS:
Engaging in sex and drug behaviors places adolescents, and especially girls, at
risk for future depression. Future research is needed to better understand the
mechanisms of the relationship between adolescent behavior and depression, and
to determine whether interventions to prevent or stop risky behaviors will also
reduce the risk of later depression.
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