Children
who often see their parents having rows are at risk of depression, experts have
warned.
Teenagers
who witnessed lots of arguments in early childhood were more likely to suffer
from the illness than others, said a Cambridge University team.
‘Violent
arguments in front of the children contribute to the likelihood of depression,’
said Professor Barbara Sahakian, of the university’s psychiatry department and
co-author of the report.
‘If you are staying together for the sake of the family, then fighting and arguing in front of the kids is not good. It would be better for them not to have that kind of environment.’
The
team identified a gene that made some children more sensitive to emotions and
also more likely to develop depression.
Researchers came up with a simple test, that can be carried out at school, to identify those at risk of depression, allowing youngsters to get help before they suffer with the disease.
Researchers
found that teenagers who struggled to process emotional information were more
likely to develop mental health problems.
In
the study of 238 children, aged between 15 and 18, those who did worst at the
test were up to four times more likely to develop depression within a year.
Previous
research has found one in 10 British children aged between five and 16 years
old have had mental health problems
Those
who did badly had a gene – present in one in five people – that made them less
emotionally resilient.
They
also lived in households where they had been exposed before the age of six to
intermittent arguments for longer than six months. One in three children live
like this, said the team.
Professor
Ian Goodyer, principal investigator on the study, said: ‘Whether we succumb to
anxiety and depression depends in part on our tendencies to think well or
poorly of ourselves at troubled times.
How
it comes about that some people see the glass half full and think positively,
whereas others see the glass half empty and think negatively about themselves
at times of stress is not known.
The
evidence is that our genes and early childhood experiences contribute.’
Previous
research has found that one in ten British children aged between five and 16
years old have had mental health problems.
In
any given year, one in four people will suffer a mental health disorder, with
most having a form of depression and anxiety.
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