Abstract
Sex differences in rates of depressive disorder have not been
convincingly explained, and this reflects
a more general failure of research to provide a comprehensive
aetiological account of depression.
The difference can be used as a probe for evaluating the research
base of integrative models of
depressive disorder (e.g. Akiskal & McKinney, 1975). It is
particularly likely to be illuminating if
the causes of the sex difference do not overlap completely the
causes of depression itself. While there
have been many reviews in the area (Weissman & Klerman, 1977;
Kessler & McRae, 1981; Wolk
& Weissman, 1995; Bebbington, 1996), this point has not been
adequately expressed.Several lines of investigation are necessary for assessing the
relative importance of social,
psychological and biological influences: the epidemiological study
of macrosocial variables and of
age effects; temperament, personality, and attributional and coping
styles; the experience of
psychosocial adversity; and the possibility of increased susceptibility
to some forms of stress in
women. Both the tendency to affiliation and the requirement for
social support may differ by sex.
The particular strains of the roles available to women may increase
their risk of depression. Possible
genetic explanations of the sex difference are of special relevance
because of their implications for
biological differences. The latter can also be studied directly:
hormonal theories in particular must be evaluated.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
145 articles.
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