This 11-year longitudinal study models the trajectories of depressive
symptoms among approximately 550 females and males raised in divorced and
nondivorced families in the rural Midwest. Using multilevel analyses, we
demonstrate that, first, depressive symptoms changed according to a
curvilinear pattern, especially for females; they increased during early
to midadolescence and then declined in late adolescence to young
adulthood. Second, compared with males, females experienced a greater
number of depressive symptoms in adolescence and early adulthood. Third,
children who experienced parental divorce by age 15 manifested a sharper
increase in depressive symptoms compared to those from nondivorced
families. Fourth, stressful life events children experienced shortly after
parental divorce mediated the effect of parental divorce on depressive
symptoms. Fifth and finally, time-varying stressful life events,
particularly those related to relationship and personal loss, were
significantly associated with the trajectories of depressive symptoms.During the past several years, support for this
research has come from multiple sources including the National Institute
of Mental Health (MH00567, MH19734, MH43270, MH48165, MH51361), the
National Institute on Drug Abuse (DA05347), the Bureau of Maternal and
Child Health (MCJ-109572), the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on
Successful Adolescent Development among Youth in High-Risk Settings, the
Iowa Agriculture and Home Economics Experiment Station (Project No. 3320),
and the California Agriculture Experiment Station
(CA-D*-HCD-6092-H).