Body image predictors of depressive symptoms in adolescence

Date

2018-10-10

Authors

Murray, Kristen
Rieger, Elizabeth
Byrne, Don

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Academic Press

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Depression rises significantly in adolescence, with females reporting twice the prevalence of males into adulthood. In accordance with cognitive vulnerability theories, eating and weight-related disturbances have been implicated in this increase, but a broader assessment of body image constructs within this framework is needed. Methods The current prospective study examined body importance, body dissatisfaction, and body change strategies to lose weight and increase muscularity as predictors of depressive symptoms over one year in N = 298 adolescents in Canberra, Australia (at Time 2, the sample comprised n = 161 female adolescents, Mage = 15.36 years, SD = 1.10; n = 137 male adolescents, Mage = 15.54 years, SD = 1.15). The moderating role of sex was also assessed. Results & conclusions Results revealed that body importance and body change strategies to increase muscularity explained significant variance in depressive symptoms beyond baseline covariates of depressive symptoms and stress, with the effect of body importance relevant in female but not male adolescents. The findings support the use of more comprehensive assessments of body image constructs to inform cognitive vulnerability theories of adolescent depression, and corresponding prevention and intervention programs.

Description

Keywords

adolescent depression, Body image, Body dissatisfaction, Body importance, Body change strategies

Citation

Source

Journal of Adolescence

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

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Restricted until

2037-12-31