|





Apocalypse Suicide
Page
Good Mood
Living with Depression
Mental Health Recovery
NIMH
SHOCKED! ECT

HealthyPlace.com Radio
Depression Support Groups

Books on
Depression
Conference Transcripts
Depression Videos
Diaries - Journals
Disorders Definitions
Mental
Health News
Online Depression Tests
Psychiatric Medications
Resources
Site Map

Email
ICQ
Instant Messenger

Visit and Post

Abuse
ADD/ADHD
Addictions
Anxiety-Panic
Bipolar
Eating Disorders
Personality Disorders
Self-Injury
send this page to a friend
|
|
 |
What Happens To
Depressed Children?
In many cases, it disappears. About 90% of the
time it is gone within one year. Sometimes it disappears without any treatment
at all. That is the good news.
The bad news is that depression in children
is recurrent. That is, even after a child recovers, he or she is much more
likely to get depressed again. About 35% will again meet the
criteria for
Major Depression within a year from recovering. By two years, half of the
children who recovered will have had a
recurrence of their
depression. About 75% of children will have a recurrence of their
depression within four years of their first episode. Each time depression
recurs, it makes it that much more likely that it will recur again.
Children are more likely to have their
depression recur if they started having
depression before age 14, if
there is divorce at the time of the depression, or if one of the
parents is also depressed at the
same time. No one can predict exactly who will have another episode of
depression and who will not. Some of the predictors for another episode of
depression are: one parent has been clinically depressed, one parent has
another psychiatric problem other than depression, and the child has other
psychiatric disorders (like
attention deficit disorder, learning disabilities, or
anxiety disorders). If all three of these are present, it
is almost certain that a teenager will develop another episode of depression
over the next 4 years. If a child lives in a family with a lot of conflict,
they are more likely to relapse.
Why should you treat depression, since most people
recover from it spontaneously?
If your child's depression resolves on its own,
you are right. But, if it goes on very long or recurs, that means that your
child is more likely to get an episode of
severe
depression or chronic
depression. The longer depression goes on, the harder it is to treat. The
longer it goes on, the more it damages the social, academic, psychological
maturation of your child. Depression is a horrible problem in children and
adolescents. The only thing more horrible is doing nothing about it.
top ~
next ~
send page to a
friend
HealthyPlace.com
Depression Center Links
home ~ site map ~
causes ~ types ~
people ~
living with
treatments ~ self-help ~ support ~ suicide ~ related
issues
|
 |
|
advertisement
|