Early maturation triggers an array of psychological, social-behavioural and interpersonal difficulties that predict elevated levels of depression in boys and girls several years later, according to research led by psychology professor Karen D Rudolph at the University of Illinois.
Rudolph and her colleagues measured pubertal timing and tracked levels of depression among more than 160 youth over a four-year period.
During their early teenage years, the youth in the study completed annual questionnaires and interviews that assessed their psychological risk factors, interpersonal stressors and coping behaviours. Parents also reported on their children's social relationships and difficulties.
"It is often believed that going through puberty earlier than peers only contributes to depression in girls," Rudolph said.
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"We found that early maturation can also be a risk for boys as they progress through adolescence, but the timing is different than in girls," said Rudolph.
Youth who entered puberty ahead of their peers were vulnerable to a number of risks that were associated with depression.
They had poorer self-images; greater anxiety; social problems, including conflict with family members and peers; and tended to befriend peers who were prone to getting into trouble, the researchers found.
These adverse effects were persistent in early maturing girls, who remained at a distinct disadvantage, even as peers caught up to them in physical development, Rudolph said.
"In girls, early maturation seems to trigger immediate psychological and environmental risks and consequent depression," Rudolph said.
"Pubertal changes cause early maturing girls to feel badly about themselves, cope less effectively with social problems, affiliate with deviant peers, enter riskier and more stressful social contexts and experience disruption and conflict within their relationships," said Rudolph.
However, these differences dissipated over time, such that by the end of the fourth year, early maturing boys did not differ significantly from their female counterparts in their levels of depression.
The study was published in the journal Development and Psychopathology.