2011
DOI: 10.1080/03630242.2011.590876
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Child Asthma and Change in Elevated Depressive Symptoms Among Mothers of Children of a Birth Cohort from Quebec

Abstract: The authors examined the association between maternal reports of child asthma attacks since birth and occurrence of elevated maternal depressive symptoms at seventeen months postpartum in the present study. The modifying role of poverty in this association was also examined. Data from n = 1,696 mother-child dyads from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development, a birth cohort of children born in 1998, were used. Maternal depressive symptoms were measured with an abridged and validated twelve-item versi… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…For the mothers with no depressive symptoms at 5 months, child asthma attacks since birth did not contribute to new depressive symptoms 1 year later. Poverty, however, was linked to increased maternal depressive symptoms (Tu, Perreault, Séguin, & Gauvin, 2011). Our finding that asthma control was not predictive of depressive symptoms at any time point lends further support to our position that health status indictors are not necessarily the driving force of psychological symptoms in this caregiver population, rather daily "life" stress may be the major contributor to maternal depression.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%
“…For the mothers with no depressive symptoms at 5 months, child asthma attacks since birth did not contribute to new depressive symptoms 1 year later. Poverty, however, was linked to increased maternal depressive symptoms (Tu, Perreault, Séguin, & Gauvin, 2011). Our finding that asthma control was not predictive of depressive symptoms at any time point lends further support to our position that health status indictors are not necessarily the driving force of psychological symptoms in this caregiver population, rather daily "life" stress may be the major contributor to maternal depression.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%