Author:
George Linda K.,Blazer Dan G.,Hughes Dana C.,Fowler Nancy
Abstract
One hundred and fifty middle-aged and elderly adults with a diagnosis of major depression were assessed initially as inpatients, and were reinterviewed 6–32 months later. Both size of social network and subjective social support were significant predictors of depressive symptoms at follow-up, with baseline depression scores and other predictors of outcome status statistically controlled. Subjective social support was most strongly associated with major depression; this effect was significantly stronger for middle-aged than older adults, and for men than women. Differences in the effects of marital status, size of social network, and subjective social support also suggest the importance of distinguishing between involvement in and quality of interpersonal relationships.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
609 articles.
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