Author:
HARKNESS K. L.,MONROE S. M.,SIMONS A. D.,THASE M.
Abstract
Background. The stress generation hypothesis proposed
by Hammen (1991) holds that depressed
individuals generate stressful conditions for themselves, which lead to
recurrence. The original test
of this hypothesis compared dependent life events in women with recurrent
depression to medical
and normal controls. Two further research questions emerged from this work:
(a) do individuals
with a history of many depressive episodes generate more dependent life
events than depressives
with fewer episodes?; and (b) what is the aetiological relevance
of any stress that may be generated?Methods. The present research tested differences in dependent
and independent events between
depressed individuals who had experienced: (a) no previous major
depressive episodes; (b) one
previous episode; and (c) two or more previous episodes. We predicted
that, based on the stress
generation hypothesis, recurrent depressives would show more dependent
events than people
without a depression history, and that these generated stressors would
be of aetiological importance
for precipitating recurrence (i.e. severe events in the 3 months preceding
recurrence).Results. Recurrent depressives experienced significantly more
total dependent events than first-onset depressives in the 12 months, but
not the 3 months, preceding their episode.Conclusions. Although the findings supported the general premise of stress
generation, the
aetiological relevance of the generated stress for recurrence requires
further study.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
93 articles.
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