Literature DB >> 2297624

Psychiatric morbidity among women in urban and rural New Zealand: psycho-social correlates.

S E Romans-Clarkson1, V A Walton, G P Herbison, P E Mullen.   

Abstract

A random community survey into psychiatric disorder among women in urban and rural New Zealand found urban women to be more often at age extremes, not married, better educated, in more paid employment, and to have better household and child-care facilities. There were no overall urban-rural differences in the GHQ-28 score, total PSE score or PSE case rates. A multiple regression found the same three factors accounted for most of the explained variance in both the urban and the rural total PSE scores: these were the quality of social networks, difficulties with alcohol, and the past experience of childhood sexual abuse. Low socioeconomic status, poor physical health, and adult experiences of sexual and physical abuse were also associated with increased psychiatric morbidity in both samples. Other individual sociodemographic items were correlated with psychiatric morbidity for the urban or rural sample only.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2297624     DOI: 10.1192/bjp.156.1.84

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0007-1250            Impact factor:   9.319


  10 in total

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Authors:  S Weich; L Twigg; G Holt; G Lewis; K Jones
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4.  Material standard of living, social class, and the prevalence of the common mental disorders in Great Britain.

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5.  The relationship between reproductive work and sociodemographic and psychosocial factors in regard to psychological distress in men and women in Spain.

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7.  Urban neighborhood poverty and the incidence of depression in a population-based cohort study.

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8.  Socio-economic status, employment and neurosis.

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9.  Social support and age influence distress outcomes differentially across urban, regional and remote Australia: an exploratory study.

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  10 in total

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