A Description of the Psycho-social Factors associated with Depression and Anxiety in South African Adolescents attending Urban Private Practices in Johannesburg
Keywords:
Adolescents, Depression, Anxiety, Psycho-social stress
Abstract
The worldwide prevalence of major depression in adolescents is reported at 4 to 8% and dysthymia at 1.6 to 8%, and the incidence of these disorders continues to rise. There is no prevalence data for anxiety and mood disorders amongst South African teenagers, but the prevalence of anxiety and mood disorders amongst adults is 23% and 10.1% respectively. This study was motivated by these factors, coupled with the association of adolescent psychopathology with negative outcomes in adulthood, such as depression, anxiety, suicide,poor academic and employment outcomes, psychosocial maladjustment and substance abuse. The aim of this study was to determine which psychosocial factors are associated with depression and anxiety in South African adolescents, and to suggest appropriate interventions.
Published
2008-07-04
Section
Scientific letters
By submitting manuscripts to SAFP, authors of original articles are assigning copyright to the South African Academy of Family Physicians. Copyright of review articles are assigned to the Publisher, Medpharm Publications (Pty) Ltd, unless otherwise specified. Authors may use their own work after publication without written permission, provided they acknowledge the original source. Individuals and academic institutions may freely copy and distribute articles published in SAFP for educational and research purposes without obtaining permission.