Association between depressive symptoms in childhood and adolescence and overweight in later life: review of the recent literature

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Samenvatting

Objective: To present an overview of the association between depressive symptoms in childhood and adolescence and subsequent overweight in later life.

Data Sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Web of Science for all indexed journals from January 1, 1997, to May 30, 2007.

Study Selection: Abstracts of 513 articles were reviewed manually. Studies were excluded if unrelated to depressive symptoms and overweight (n = 460), if they were conducted in an adult population (n = 10) or in a population of all age groups (n = 2), or if they were performed in clinic-based populations of overweight participants. In total, 32 articles were reviewed including 21 cross-sectional and 11 longitudinal reports.

Main Exposure: Depressive symptoms in childhood and adolescence.

Main Outcome Measure: Overweight.

Results: Four cross-sectional studies that satisfied our quality criteria revealed an association between depressive symptoms and overweight in girls aged 8 to 15 years, reporting different effect sizes including a correlation coefficient of 0.14 and a regression coefficient of 0.27. Four longitudinal studies in accord with our quality criteria suggest that depressive symptoms in childhood or adolescence are associated with a 1.90- to 3.50-fold increased risk of subsequent overweight (95% confidence intervals varying from 1.02 to 5.80, respectively).

Conclusion: These results support a positive association between depressive symptoms at age 6 to 19 years and overweight in later life, assessed after a period of 1 to 15 years.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)981-988
Aantal pagina's8
TijdschriftArchives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
Volume162
Nummer van het tijdschrift10
DOI's
StatusPublished - okt.-2008

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