# Nonlinear associations between maternal depressive symptoms and children’s mental health: a cross-sectional study

**Authors:** Fenling Feng, Xin Zhang, Jihua Hu

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40359-026-04007-5 · 2026-01-19

## TL;DR

This study found that the link between a mother's depression and her child's mental health follows a nonlinear pattern, with stronger effects below certain thresholds.

## Contribution

The study reveals nonlinear dose-response relationships between maternal depressive symptoms and children's mental health outcomes.

## Key findings

- Stronger associations between maternal depression and child mental health were observed below specific CES-D score thresholds.
- The associations weakened significantly above the identified turning points for different mental health outcomes.

## Abstract

While associations between maternal depressive symptoms (MDS) and offspring mental health have been documented, the precise nature of this relationship, particularly potential nonlinear patterns, remains insufficiently characterized.

This study sought to examine potential nonlinear dose-response relationships between MDS and child mental health among preschool-aged children.

We conducted a cross-sectional investigation enrolling 17,115 mother-child dyads from kindergartens in a city in western China. MDS were assessed using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). Children’s mental health was assessed via maternal reports using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Data were collected between February 28 and March 5, 2025.

Among the 17,115 mother-child dyads, 16.14% (n = 2,763) of mothers (mean age: 34.49 ± 4.65 years) reported elevated depressive symptoms (CES-D score ≥ 16). A nonlinear dose-response relationship was observed, with turning points at maternal CES-D scores of 17 for total difficulties and internalizing problems, 21 for externalizing problems, and 14 for prosocial behavior problems. Below these thresholds, stronger associations were observed (OR = 1.20 for total difficulties, OR = 1.16 for internalizing problems, OR = 1.10 for externalizing problems, and OR = 1.11 for prosocial behavior problems), while above the thresholds, the associations were substantially weakened.

This cross-sectional study identified distinctive nonlinear dose-response associations between MDS and children’s mental health outcomes in a western Chinese city. The associations were stronger below specific thresholds while weakening above these thresholds. These findings warrant further investigation and validation.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40359-026-04007-5.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** externalizing problems (MESH:D017577), prosocial behavior problems (MESH:D001523), internalizing problems (MESH:D000082122), Depression (MESH:D003866)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12896353/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12896353