Frontiers | Parent-Adolescent Communication and Early Adolescent Depressive Symptoms: The Roles of Gender and Adolescents’ Age

Positive parent-adolescent communication has been found to be negatively related to adolescent depressive symptoms; however, few studies have investigated th...

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Ajouté le

8 mars 2026

Public

parent

Niveaux scolaires

6e année–8e année

Type de page

Article

Mots-clés

Father-adolescent communicationMother-adolescent communicationAdolescent depressive symptomsgenderage

Introduction

Parent-Adolescent Communication and Adolescent Depression in China

  • Study Objective: Investigated how adolescent gender and age (grade level) moderate the relationship between parent-adolescent communication and depressive symptoms among Chinese junior high school students.
  • Sample Size: 11,455 Chinese junior high school students (mean age 14.15 years; 49.86% boys; 5,712 in 7th grade, 5,743 in 9th grade).
  • Key Findings:
    • Gender and Age Interaction: The protective effect of positive parent-adolescent communication against depressive symptoms is jointly moderated by gender and age.
    • Girls: The negative association between both father-adolescent and mother-adolescent communication and depressive symptoms was significantly stronger in 9th-grade girls compared to 7th-grade girls.
    • Boys: There was no significant difference in the protective effects of parental communication between 7th-grade and 9th-grade boys.
  • Contextual Factors:
    • Academic Stress: 9th-grade students in China face significant pressure due to the senior high school entrance examination.
    • Cultural Nuances: Chinese culture often emphasizes parental authority and obedience; academic achievement is a central focus of parent-adolescent communication, which can impact mental health.
    • Prevalence: A meta-analysis cited in the text indicates a 24.3% prevalence of depressive symptoms among secondary school students in mainland China.
  • Theoretical Basis: The study utilizes attachment theory, noting that mothers and fathers often play distinct roles in providing emotional support and a "secure base" for exploration.
  • Conclusion: Positive parent-adolescent communication is a critical protective factor, with its benefits being most salient for senior-grade (9th grade) girls in the Chinese junior high school context.

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