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Old 27-05-2006, 15:36
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Girls at much greater depression risk when experimenting with alcohol, drugs and sex

Not really convinced by any of this and if you read where the funding for this research is coming from, you can see how the research may well have been skewed from the start. This from http://www.pire.org/ :

Girls at much greater depression risk when
experimenting with alcohol, drugs and sex
Risky behaviors are symptoms that require screening, study says

CHAPEL HILL – New research shows that when teen-age boys and girls experiment with sex,
drugs and alcohol, girls are at much greater risk of depression than boys.
The study from PIRE Chapel Hill Center found that
if girls and boys abstain from these
behaviors, their risk for depression doesn't significantly differ, which is contrary to the widelyheld
assumption that girls are more prone to depression than boys. However, as soon as they both
start experimenting, even only occasionally, girls become more depressed than boys, according
to the study published this month.
At higher levels of substance abuse and sexual activity among teens,
boys and girls show similar levels of depressive symptoms.
While all teens engaging in higher levels of alcohol and drug use and sexual activity should be
screened for depression, girls, in particular, should be screened even if they are only experimenting, said
Martha Waller, Ph.D., the study’s primary investigator.
“What’s interesting is that just being female does not necessarily put you at a greater risk for
depression, which has generally been assumed,” she said. “At puberty, we see that the prevalence of
depression starts to greatly increase in girls but not in boys, and this gender difference has always been
attributed to developmental changes in girls such as hormonal changes. But in this study, we find that for
girls who have
not experimented with smoking or drinking or become sexually active, their risk for
depression is no greater than males, regardless of their developmental status.”
Published this month in
Archives of Women’s Mental Health, the study of nearly 20,000 teens
showed that girls who used alcohol, tobacco and drugs only occasionally are 2½ times as likely to show
signs of depression as teen girls who abstained. When girls experiment with sex, they are 3½ times as
likely to experience depressive symptoms as those who abstain, according to the research, which was
funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
While girls experience significantly more depressive symptoms than boys at low levels of alcohol
and drug use and sexual activity, boys who engage in these risk behaviors still experience more
depressive symptoms than those who abstain. For both girls and boys, the depressive symptoms generally
increased as risk behavior increased. Girls who used marijuana regularly were almost nine times as likely
to experience depression, and those who used IV drugs were nearly 18 times as likely to suffer from
depression compared to girls who did not, the study found. Boys who binge drink are about 2½ times as
likely to be depressed, while those who regularly use marijuana are five times as likely, and those who
use intravenous drugs are six times as likely, to show symptoms of depression compared to boys who
abstain completely.
Both substance abuse and sexual activity may alter a girl’s social context, which could induce
stress and change self-perceptions, both of which could contribute to depression, Waller said. In addition,
there may be differences in how girls and boys physically respond to substance use that help explain the
sex differences, she said.
Other research last year from PIRE Chapel Hill Center showed that sex, drugs and alcohol among
teens actually precede – and apparently lead to -- the onset of adolescent depression, which contradicts
the common belief that depressed teens may be “self-medicating” through substance abuse and sex.
PIRE, or Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, is a national nonprofit public health
research institute with centers in eight U.S. cities that is supported primarily by federal and state research
and program funds.

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