Special Notes on
Women and Depression
Women are approximately two times more likely
than men to suffer from major
depression and dysthymia
(Research Agenda for Psychosocial and Behavioral Factors in Women's Health,
1996). Depression has been called the most significant mental health risk for
women, especially younger women of childbearing and childrearing age (Glied
& Kofman, 1995).
Depression
in women is misdiagnosed approximately 30 percent to 50 percent of the
time. Approximately 70 percent of the prescriptions for antidepressants are given to women, often
with improper diagnosis and monitoring. Prescription drug misuse is a very real
danger for women (McGrath et al., 1990).
Risk Factors for Depression in Women
High levels of
depressive symptoms are
particularly common among individuals with economic problems and those of lower
socioeconomic status. Individuals who are less educated and unemployed are at
higher risk for depression. These
risk factors are
overrepresented among women (McGrath et al., 1990).
Women of color are more likely than Caucasian women to
share a number of socioeconomic risk factors for depression, including
racial/ethnic discrimination, lower educational and income levels, segregation
into low status and high-stress jobs, unemployment, poor health, larger family
sizes, marital dissolution, and single parenthood (McGrath et al., 1990).
Women confronting the impact of immigration and
acculturation reported a higher level of depression than those women without
such conflicts. For example, the National Center for Health Statistics (1994)
indicated that Asian American
women over the age of 65 have the highest female suicide rate among all
ethnic and racial groups. In addition, Asian American adolescent girls have the
highest rates of depressive symptoms of all racial groups and have the highest
suicide rate among all women between 15 and 24 years of age.
The rate of
sexual and physical abuse is much higher than previously
suspected and is a major factor in women's depression. Depressive symptoms may
be long-standing effects of
post-traumatic stress disorder for many women (McGrath et
al., 1990).
Married women have higher rates of depression
than unmarried women, but the reverse is true for men. Marriage seems to confer
a greater protective advantage on men than on women. In unhappy marriages,
women are three times as likely as men to be depressed. Women's risk of
depressive symptoms and demoralization is higher among mothers of young
children and increases with the number of children in the house (McGrath et
al., 1990).
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