Childhood maltreatment and impact on clinical features of major depression in adults.

dc.contributor.author

Medeiros, Gustavo C

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Prueitt, William L

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Minhajuddin, Abu

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Patel, Shirali S

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Czysz, Andrew H

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Furman, Jennifer L

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Mason, Brittany L

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Rush, A John

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Jha, Manish K

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Trivedi, Madhukar H

dc.date.accessioned

2022-04-13T23:01:03Z

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2022-04-13T23:01:03Z

dc.date.issued

2020-11

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2022-04-13T23:01:03Z

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Objectives

This study examined: 1) the prevalence of childhood maltreatment (CMT) in individuals with chronic and/or recurrent depression, 2) the association between CMT and depressive symptoms, 3) the link between CMT and worse clinical presentation of depression, 4) the effects of accumulation of different types of CMT, and 5) the relationship between the age at CMT and depression.

Methods

We analyzed the baseline data of 663 individuals from the CO-MED study. CMT was determined by a brief self-reported questionnaire assessing sexual abuse, emotional abuse, physical abuse, and neglect. Correlational analyses were conducted.

Results

Half of the sample (n = 331) reported CMT. Those with CMT had higher rates of panic/phobic, cognitive and anhedonic symptoms than those without CMT. All individual types of maltreatment were associated with a poorer clinical presentation including: 1) earlier MDD onset; 2) more severe MDD, 3) more suiccidality, 4) worse quality of life, and functioning, and 5) more psychiatric comorbidities. Clinical presentation was worse in participants who reported multiple types of CMT.

Conclusions

In chronic and/or recurrent depression, CMT is common, usually of multiple types and is associated with a worse clinical presentation in MDD. The combination of multiple types of CMT is associated with more impairment.
dc.identifier

S0165-1781(19)32528-4

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0165-1781

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1872-7123

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24795

dc.language

eng

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Elsevier BV

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Psychiatry research

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10.1016/j.psychres.2020.113412

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Humans

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Retrospective Studies

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Depressive Disorder, Major

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Child Abuse

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Quality of Life

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Adult

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Middle Aged

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Child

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Female

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Male

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Adult Survivors of Child Abuse

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Self Report

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Surveys and Questionnaires

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Physical Abuse

dc.title

Childhood maltreatment and impact on clinical features of major depression in adults.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Rush, A John|0000-0003-2004-2382

pubs.begin-page

113412

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Published

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293

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