Separating Within-Person from Between-Person Effects in the Longitudinal Co-Occurrence of Depression and Different Anxiety Syndromes in Youth

Publication date: Available online 6 June 2019Source: Journal of Research in PersonalityAuthor(s): Erin E. Long, Jami F. Young, Benjamin L. HankinAbstractCross-lagged panel models (CLPM) are often used to study anxiety-depression co-occurrence. However, the CLPM aggregates within- and between-person variance, which can lead to incorrect estimates. The latent curve model with structured residuals (LCM-SR) parses these sources of variance. We utilized the LCM-SR to examine prospective associations between anxiety (physical, social, separation) and depression. Youth (N=680; Mage=11.8; 55% female) completed measures of depression and anxiety every 3 months for 3 years (13 timepoints). The LCM-SR describing anxiety-depression co-occurrence fit well (RMSEA=.05, SRMR=.06). Depression predicted within-person change in social (b=.09), physical (b=.04), and separation anxiety (b=.06) over 13 timepoints. Separation anxiety predicted within-person change in depression (b=.08); social and physical anxiety did not. Findings advance knowledge of within-person development of anxiety-depression co-occurrence.
Source: Journal of Research in Personality - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research