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Changes in maternal depression are associated with...
Journal article

Changes in maternal depression are associated with MST outcomes for adolescents with co‐occurring externalizing and internalizing problems

Abstract

The efficacy of Multisystemic therapy (MST) in treating adolescent aggression has been established, however, not all youth and their families benefit from MST. One reason for this treatment variability could be the failure to distinguish between different aggressive subtypes with different risk factors, developmental prognoses and treatment needs. We investigated whether changes in maternal depression over MST would lead to different outcomes for two aggressive subtypes: pure externalizers (EXT) and mixed externalizers/internalizers (MIXED). Forty-two EXT and 27 MIXED youth and their families underwent MST for six months. Maternal depression, youth externalizing and internalizing behaviour were assessed before and after MST. Results showed a marginally greater change in externalizing for EXT youth. In addition, reductions in maternal depression were related to successful treatment outcomes for MIXED youth only. Our findings have implications for MST clinicians, namely the importance of reducing depressive symptoms in mothers of MIXED youth to improve their outcomes.

Authors

Grimbos T; Granic I

Journal

Journal of Adolescence, Vol. 32, No. 6, pp. 1415–1423

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

December 1, 2009

DOI

10.1016/j.adolescence.2009.05.004

ISSN

0140-1971

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