2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2018.10.007
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Poor peer relations in adolescence, social support in early adulthood, and depressive symptoms in later adulthood—evaluating mediation and interaction using four-way decomposition analysis

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Cited by 19 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…There is a paucity of research assessing the mediation effect of marijuana by alcohol on crash risk and crash initiation. Our study reveals that about 23% of the total effect of marijuana use on fatal 2-vehicle initiation is due to mediation through alcohol, which is consistent with the additive effect model of risk factors where one exposure contributes to another exposure that cumulatively increase the risk of the outcome (Bean et al 2019 ). Since the risk of crash initiation increases with BACs, the magnitude of the mediation effect of marijuana by alcohol is likely to increase with BACs in a dose-response fashion.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…There is a paucity of research assessing the mediation effect of marijuana by alcohol on crash risk and crash initiation. Our study reveals that about 23% of the total effect of marijuana use on fatal 2-vehicle initiation is due to mediation through alcohol, which is consistent with the additive effect model of risk factors where one exposure contributes to another exposure that cumulatively increase the risk of the outcome (Bean et al 2019 ). Since the risk of crash initiation increases with BACs, the magnitude of the mediation effect of marijuana by alcohol is likely to increase with BACs in a dose-response fashion.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Unstandardized coefficients from models testing the association between adolescent peer dysfunction and adult depressive symptoms are presented in Figure 2 and Tables 2 and 3. The positive unadjusted association for self-reported adolescent peer dysfunction (b=1.28, p<.001) was consistent with findings from unrelated individuals (e.g., Bagwell et al, 2001;Bean et al, 2019;Landstedt et al, 2015;Modin et al, 2011), and was not attenuated when controlling for sex and other individual characteristics (i.e., depressive symptoms, age, and dysfunction in relations with siblings and parents) in adolescence (b=1.34, p=.003). The association remained significant in the sibling comparison model that controlled for familial confounding (b=1.15, p=.005).…”
Section: Adolescent Peer Dysfunction Adult Depression 15supporting
confidence: 73%
“…For example, if the association is entirely due to a confounder, a preventative intervention that successfully targets adolescents' peer functioning would have no impact on depression risk in adulthood. Previous studies indicate that statistically controlling for certain individual-level (e.g., sex, baseline depression severity) and/or family-level (e.g., socioeconomic status) confounders attenuatedbut did not fully explainthis relationship (Bean et al, 2019;Bowes et al, 2015;Landstedt et al, 2015). However, many potential family-level confounders (e.g., parental depression, maladaptive home environment, genetic characteristics; Gjerde et al, 2017;Silberg et al, 2010) have not been considered in prior studies, precluding stronger "causal" inferences.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Y = Outcome (Alcohol misuse in adulthood).X = Exposure (Parental alcohol misuse); x* = No; x = Yes.M = Mediator (School performance); m* = At or below-average school marks; m = Above-average school marks.*Here, we build on the definitions proposed by Bean et al . 23 …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%