Abstract

Background: Although children’s depressive and anxious symptoms have been broadly construed as internalizing problems, the current study sought to identify factors that may differentially contribute to these two mental health problems in a high-risk sample. Prior research has not adequately tested both depressive versus anxious symptoms simultaneously, nor has it adequately considered the role of negative versus positive parenting simultaneously, thereby neglecting the potential overlap in both sets of constructs. Overlooking such potential statistical overlap obfuscates how factors may differentially contribute to either depressive versus anxious symptoms. Existing research has also focused on lower-risk community samples. Method: The present study investigated whether children’s negative self-concept or maladaptive attributional style mediated the link between both negative and positive parenting in a racially diverse, at-risk sample of 65 primary school-age children recruited from mental health agencies. Results: When tested together, more negative parenting, but not less positive parenting, retained direct effects on both depressive and anxious symptoms. Both negative self-concept and maladaptive attributional style fully mediated the association between less positive parenting and children’s depressive symptoms, whereas positive self-concept, but not attributional style, mediated between less positive parenting and anxious symptoms. Conclusions: The current findings underscore potential differential intervention targets for these two internalizing problems and highlight the need for future research to consider both depressive and anxious symptoms, and related predictors, simultaneously to control for their shared variance.

Highlights

  • That path model demonstrated that neither depressive or anxious symptoms were significantly linked to either positive or negative parenting, with only less maladaptive attributional style remaining as significantly associated with more positive parenting

  • These studies differ from the current study in several notable ways given that the vast majority of the literature relies on non-clinical samples and typically utilizes statistical models that do not control for potential overlaps between either positive and negative parenting or between anxiety and depressive symptoms

  • The current study observed that less positive parenting was significantly associated with children’s depressive symptoms in simple bivariate analyses but the model controlling for negative parenting indicated that positive parenting did not exert direct effects, only indirect effects

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Summary

Introduction

Conclusions: The current findings underscore potential differential intervention targets for these two internalizing problems and highlight the need for future research to consider both depressive and anxious symptoms, and related predictors, simultaneously to control for their shared variance. Depression and anxiety in children are typically construed as expressions of the broadband construct of internalizing behavior problems, potentially because of shared communalities [3,4] or because of reciprocal influences on each other across time [5]. Theoretically, depression and anxiety may entail distinct processes, consistent with the classic cognitive content specificity hypothesis [6]. Several have argued that childhood depression and anxiety may follow different pathways [7], with particular attention on potential divergences in cognitive processes [8–10]

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