- Network analysis in 2341 adolescents with MDD identified depression and loneliness as highest strength centrality, indicating primary clinical nodes.
- Loneliness and problematic smartphone use functioned as bridges linking mental health symptoms with ecological factors such as trauma and social support.
- No significant global network differences by left-behind experience, though childhood trauma and PSU trended more central in left-behind adolescents.
Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2026 Jul 1. doi: 10.1007/s00406-026-02303-0. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Adolescence is a critical period for the onset of major depressive disorder (MDD), during which emotional symptoms frequently co-occur with environmental adversity and maladaptive behavioral coping. In China, these processes may be further shaped by left-behind experience (LBE) – a prevalent structural vulnerability in which children grow up separated from migrating parents. To clarify these relationships, we applied network analysis in a clinical sample of 2341 adolescents (Mage = 14.99 years,77.92% female) with MDD. Participants were recruited from 14 psychiatric outpatient clinics across China. The networks examined associations among mental health symptoms (depression, anxiety, stress, sleep problems, self-esteem, loneliness), ecological factors (childhood trauma, peer victimization, social support), and problematic smartphone use (PSU). We further examined whether network topology differed by LBE (19.99% of the sample). In the full sample network, depression and loneliness demonstrated the highest strength centrality, while sleep exhibited the lowest. Loneliness and PSU acted as bridges between mental health symptoms and ecological factors. Network comparison tests revealed no significant between-group global structural differences. Although childhood trauma and PSU appeared more centrally positioned in the left-behind group and social support showed slightly higher centrality in the non-left-behind network, these subtle trends need further confirmation. These findings underscore critical psychological-ecological-behavioral interaction pathways in adolescents with MDD, and suggest loneliness and PSU as promising targets for bridge-informed clinical intervention.
PMID:42384048 | DOI:10.1007/s00406-026-02303-0
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