Antecedents of depressive symptomatology in childhood and adolescence were examined in a
prospective longitudinal study of at-risk youth (n = 168) from families of lower
socioeconomic status. Relations between family context factors, maternal depressive symptoms,
and depressive symptoms in childhood and adolescence were examined, with a focus on early
family relationship factors rarely available for analysis in longitudinal data sets. Results suggest the
possibility of etiological differences between depressive symptoms in childhood and in
adolescence. Depressive symptomatology in childhood was predicted by the overall family
context. Cumulative effects of maternal depressive symptomatology, early care lacking in
emotional supportiveness, abuse, and family stressors were observed. Depressive symptomatology
in adolescence, on the other hand, was specifically associated with maternal depression and early
care lacking in emotional supportiveness. Moreover, an intriguing sex difference emerged:
maternal depressive symptomatology was strongly associated with depressive symptomatology in
adolescence for females, but for males supportive early care appeared more relevant.
A case of recovered memory of childhood trauma is reported with documented sexual trauma in early childhood, chronicled evidence of the absence of memory for traumatic experience over a period of time, and substantial evidence of 'spontaneous' recovery of memory. This account contains the first available prospective report of memory loss in a case in which there is both documented evidence of trauma and evidence of recovery of memory. The case emerged as part of a broadband, large-scale study of children followed closely from birth to adulthood which was not focused on memory for trauma. Prospective data gathered in a neutral research context, corroborated and supplemented by retrospective information, circumvent many limitations of previous retrospective accounts of recovered memories.
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