Researchers Identify Critical Mental Health Connection

A new study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders has identified a specific mental health vulnerability affecting adolescent girls who are developing attention regulation skills. Researchers from Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center studied 341 early adolescents ages 10 to 12, finding that when girls building focus abilities experience what psychologists call “thwarted belongingness” – the feeling that they don’t fit in or aren’t connected to others – they face significantly higher rates of depressive symptoms and thoughts of suicide.

The finding was striking: this connection appeared specifically in girls developing attention skills but not in boys with similar profiles or in girls without focus challenges. Lead researcher Dr. Stephen P. Becker and colleagues describe this discovery as “a first” in identifying this particular vulnerability and a potential target for early intervention.