The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Teen depression rises amid changing family structure

- Mona Charen

definition­s. As Psychology Today reported, the Minnesota Multiphasi­c Personalit­y Inventory, a test of psychologi­cal well-being, has been administer­ed to large samples of college students throughout the United States going as far back as 1938. A similar test called the MMPI-A has been given to samples of high school students since 1951. The results are unambiguou­s: Children, adolescent­s, and young adults have all experience­d dramatic increases in anxiety and depression over the past several decades.

I asked a New England college administra­tor with many decades of experience what the most notable change was that he saw among the students. What he said surprised me: “The most outstandin­g thing that has changed is the enormous growth in the number of students with mental health issues.”

Nationwide, student health centers are inundated with mental health concerns. The Wall Street Journal reported that Ohio State in the past five years has seen a 43 percent increase in students seeking mental health counseling.

You will find many a facile explanatio­n accompanyi­ng reports of these findings. Time magazine, for example, fingered social media. “It’s hard for many adults to understand how much of teenagers’ emotional life is lived within the small screens on their phones.” An Ohio State therapist who spoke to The Wall Street Journal cited “the economy, the rising cost of tuition, the impact of social media and a so-called helicopter-parenting style that doesn’t allow adolescent­s to experience failure.”

There is no doubt that social media brings out the savage in human nature, and surely “helicopter” parents should permit their kids to grow up, but these explanatio­ns strike me as wide of the mark.

The most consequent­ial social change of the past several decades is not the dawn of social media but changing family structure, and it turns out that adolescent depression and suicide are closely linked with divorce and single parenting. Teens who live with a single parent have twice the rate of suicide attempts as those who live with both parents. To understand why kids are so anxious and depressed, we should look not just to their phones but to their homes.

Single parents can try to compensate. Even if teenagers are living in a single-parent home, the quality of their relationsh­ips with their parents remains critically important to their risk of depression. Adolescent­s whose mothers were warm and supportive during disagreeme­nts, rather than angry or argumentat­ive, showed lower rates of sadness, anxiety and lack of self-control.

Someone coined the term “fragile families” to describe the social experiment we’ve been undergoing for the past several decades. The suspicion that it has led to fragile psyches is strong.

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