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depression
NEW YORK, Nov 24 (Reuters) Children and preadolescents who show signs of depression may turn to alcohol sooner rather than later, researchers report. All the more reason, they say, to catch and treat early-life depression.
''Little is known about the impact of depression on the onset of alcohol use in adolescents,'' Dr Ping Wu from Columbia University, New York, told Reuters Health.
Wu and colleagues explored this topic in a cohort of Puerto Rican 10- to 13-year-olds participating in a long-term mental health study. They conducted face-to-face interviews with the children and their parents on several occasions between 2000 and 2004.
Among a total of 1119 children who had never used alcohol at the start of the study, 110 (9.8 per cent) reported using alcohol in the previous year at one or more follow-up assessment.
The researchers defined alcohol use as drinking a full can of beer, a glass of wine or wine cooler, a shot of liquor, or a mixed drink -- not just sips from another person's drink.
Depressive symptoms were positively related with the early onset of drinking, report Wu and colleagues in the medical journal Pediatrics.
Rates of alcohol initiation during follow-up varied markedly by level of depression. Roughly 4.1 per cent of children with one or fewer depressive symptoms at baseline starting drinking during follow-up, compared with 10.2 per cent of those with two to nine depressive symptoms, and 14.1 per cent of those with 10 or more depressive symptoms.
The 899 children with medium to high levels of depressive symptoms were more than twice as likely to use alcohol as the 220 children with low levels of depressive symptoms, according to the report.
''The
finding
that
early
life
depressive
symptoms
may
lead
to
earlier
onset
of
alcohol
use
has
important
clinical
and
policy
implications,''
Wu
told
Reuters
Health,
''because
studies
have
shown
that
people
who
had
early
onset
of
alcohol
use
were
much
more
likely
to
develop
alcohol
abuse/dependence
later
in
their
lives.''
Therefore,
''it
is
important
to
identify
and
treat
depression
in
preadolescent
children,''
Wu
emphasized.



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