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Depression In Childhood

There is often the image of happy-go-lucky children, but this may not always be the case. As with adults, children can experience depression. There are some similarities and some differences between depression in adults and children. Children aged seven to seventeen may resemble adults in terms of their depressed mood, inability to experience pleasure, fatigue, concentration problems and thoughts of suicide. They differ because the rates of suicide attempts are higher. Children may experience more guilt, more frequent early waking, more weight loss, loss of appetite and early morning depression than adults. Depression in children is also recurrent. Children who have suffered major depression are likely to continue to show significant depressive symptoms as much as eight years later. Estimates of the amount of children experiencing depression depend upon the country, sample used and age of children.

Depression can also be inferred from some behaviours, such as acting aggressively and misbehaving, which would not be termed in adults as showing an underlying depression. Depression has been found to occur in less than 1% of pre-school age children, 2 – 3% of school age children, but 7 – 13% of adolescents. In adolescence, females outweigh males by a ratio of 2:1 in experiencing depression, but prior to the age of 12, boys are more likely to experience depression.

There is a problem with diagnosing depression due to the presence of other factors. Up to 70% of children with depression will also have an anxiety disorder or significant anxiety symptoms. Depression is also common in children with conduct disorders or attention deficit disorders.

What is Depression?

Everyone goes through periods of feeling a bit fed up or down. We often hear people say that they are depressed, but actual depression is more than just feeling a bit sad and down. With depression a person will feel persistently sad for weeks or months, and sometimes years.

Depression is a very serious condition with real symptoms, not something that a person can stop by “pulling themselves together”. Depression affects people in different ways and can cause a wide range of symptoms.

Doctors will describe depression according to how serious the depression is –

  • Mild depression - Has an impact on the person’s daily life.
  • Moderate depression - Has a significant impact on a person’s daily life.
  • Severe depression - Makes it almost impossible for a person to get through their daily life. Some people with severe depression will also have psychotic symptoms.

Clinical depression is a serious mental illness that negatively affects how a person thinks. There are many different symptoms and a person with depression is unlikely to have all symptoms. But if a person experiences these symptoms for the majority of the day, every day for more than two weeks, they should seek medical help.

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