Frontiers in Psychiatry (May 2023)

Association between parental separation, childhood trauma, neuroticism, and depression: a case control study

  • Simon Sanwald,
  • GenEmo Research Group,
  • Christian Montag,
  • Markus Kiefer,
  • Bernhard J. Connemann,
  • Carlos Schönfeldt-Lecuona,
  • Thomas Kammer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1112664
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundParental separation has been suggested to be associated with depression development in offspring. The new family constellation subsequent to separation could be associated with elevated scores of childhood trauma, shaping more emotionally instable personalities. This could ultimately be a risk factor for mood disorders and particularly the development of depression in life.MethodsTo test this hypothesis, we investigated the associations between parental separation, childhood trauma (CTQ) and personality (NEO-FFI) in a sample of N = 119 patients diagnosed with depression and N = 119 age and sex matched healthy controls.ResultsWhile parental separation was associated with elevated scores of childhood trauma, there was no association between parental separation and Neuroticism. Furthermore, in a logistic regression analysis, Neuroticism and childhood trauma were found to be significant predictors for depression diagnosis (yes/no), but not parental separation (yes/no).ConclusionParental separation might be associated with depression only indirectly via childhood trauma. Childhood trauma or Neuroticism seem more directly related to the development of depression. However, it is worthwhile to install prevention programs helping parents and children to cope with parental separation in order to minimize the impact of separation and associated stressors.

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