Author:
HOPE S.,RODGERS B.,POWER C.
Abstract
Background. Evidence is conflicting as to whether the
association between marital status and
psychological distress is due to selection (i.e. distress influences marital
status) or causation (marital
status influences distress). We investigate: (i) whether differences
in psychological distress pre-date
marital transitions; (ii) whether levels of distress change following
transitions;
and (iii) potential mediating and moderating factors.Methods. Data on psychological distress (indicated by the Malaise
Inventory) and marital status at
ages 23 and 33 were analysed for 4514 men and 4842 women from the 1958
birth cohort.Results. Higher levels of distress were found among the divorced
and lower levels among the single
and the married. Selection was seen in the lower initial mean symptoms
of those who married (1·69
for men; 2·84 for women) compared to those remaining single (2·41
for men; 3·26 for women).
Causation was indicated by the relative deterioration in distress of those
who divorced compared
to the continuously married (an increase of 0·31 and 0·03
respectively for men), especially in women
(a decrease of 0·18 versus 0·71). This was most
evident in women who were downwardly mobile and
those with children. Recently separated men and women showed especially
large increases in
distress.Conclusions. The relationship between marital status and psychological
distress involves selection
and causation. Findings failed to support ideas of marriage being protective
(through social
support), or detrimental (through family roles). Divorce increased distress,
with both acute and
longer-term components moderated by secondary factors such as childcare
and declining socio-economic status.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
124 articles.
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