Literature DB >> 1940206

Childhood parental loss and adult depression.

J D McLeod1.   

Abstract

Previous research demonstrates convincingly that childhood parental deaths and parental divorces have implications for adult well-being as defined by levels of depression, educational attainment, early age at marriage, and risk of divorce. What this research has failed to examine are the interconnections among these outcomes. Specifically, are the socioeconomic and marital outcomes of parental loss implicated in the observed higher levels of depression? This analysis takes a first step in answering this question. Using data from a sample of 1,755 married men and women, I estimated regression models which examine the extent to which adult socioeconomic status and current marital quality mediate and/or modify the loss-depression relationship. Parental divorce was strongly related to socioeconomic and marital outcomes. Furthermore, current marital quality contributed importantly to understanding the higher levels of depressed mood observed among persons from divorced homes. Parental death was much more weakly related to socioeconomic and marital outcomes, and these outcomes played little role in explaining its relationship to depression. Finally, all of these relationships were stronger among women than men. These findings support the utility of life-course approaches to understanding adult mental health.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 1940206

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Soc Behav        ISSN: 0022-1465


  31 in total

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7.  Childhood adversities as risk factors for adult mental disorders: results from the Health 2000 study.

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8.  Stress in Childhood and Adulthood: Effects on Marital Quality Over Time.

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9.  The life course and the stress process: some conceptual comparisons.

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10.  Cumulative lifetime adversities and alcohol dependence in adolescence and young adulthood.

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