Literature DB >> 2592681

Characterizing life events as risk factors for depression: the role of fateful loss events.

P E Shrout, B G Link, B P Dohrenwend, A E Skodol, A Stueve, J Mirotznik.   

Abstract

Empirical associations between life events and health are often weak, in part because event exposure measures may group together very different kinds of experiences within a single event category. Attempts to refine the measures (by using respondents' subjective appraisals of event stressfulness or by taking into consideration situational and personal factors that influence the contextual threat of the events) may strengthen the association, but they cloud the clarity of any causal inference by confounding the measure with extraneous variation. Instead, the use of descriptive information about what actually happened before, during, and after each event is recommended to define exposure to potent, fateful life events. In a comparison of 96 patients with major depression and 404 community residents with no apparent depression, the odds that a person would have experienced one or more events meeting criteria for fatefulness and disruptiveness was 2.5 times greater in the depressed group.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1989        PMID: 2592681     DOI: 10.1037//0021-843x.98.4.460

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol        ISSN: 0021-843X


  26 in total

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Review 2.  Inventorying stressful life events as risk factors for psychopathology: Toward resolution of the problem of intracategory variability.

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Review 5.  From stress to inflammation and major depressive disorder: a social signal transduction theory of depression.

Authors:  George M Slavich; Michael R Irwin
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7.  Switching Dynamics and the Stress Process.

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8.  The enduring influence of drinking motives on alcohol consumption after fateful trauma.

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Review 9.  Black sheep get the blues: a psychobiological model of social rejection and depression.

Authors:  George M Slavich; Aoife O'Donovan; Elissa S Epel; Margaret E Kemeny
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10.  The cumulative impact of nonsevere life events predicts depression recurrence during maintenance treatment with interpersonal psychotherapy.

Authors:  Shannon N Lenze; Jill M Cyranowski; Wesley K Thompson; Barbara Anderson; Ellen Frank
Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol       Date:  2008-12
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