Gender Differences in Depression

From early adolescence through adulthood, women are twice as likely as men to experience depression. Many different explanations for this gender difference in depression have been offered, but none seems to fully explain it. Recent research has focused on gender differences in stress responses, and in exposure to certain stressors. I review this research and describe how gender differences in stress experiences and stress reactivity may interact to create women's greater vulnerability to depression.

[1]  M. Weissman,et al.  Cross-national epidemiology of major depression and bipolar disorder. , 1996, JAMA.

[2]  S. Nolen-Hoeksema,et al.  The emergence of gender differences in depression during adolescence. , 1994, Psychological bulletin.

[3]  Ellen Leibenluft,et al.  Gender differences in mood and anxiety disorders : from bench to bedside , 1999 .

[4]  C. Mazure,et al.  Childhood sexual abuse as a risk factor for depression in women: psychosocial and neurobiological correlates. , 1999, The American journal of psychiatry.

[5]  N. Breslau,et al.  Sex differences in posttraumatic stress disorder. , 1997, Archives of general psychiatry.

[6]  S. Nolen-Hoeksema,et al.  Explaining the gender difference in depressive symptoms. , 1999, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[7]  E. Frank,et al.  Adolescent onset of the gender difference in lifetime rates of major depression: a theoretical model. , 2000, Archives of general psychiatry.

[8]  S. Nolen-Hoeksema,et al.  Sex Differences in Depression , 1990 .

[9]  Deborah J. Weatherston Infant Mental Health , 2001 .

[10]  G. Wilkinson,et al.  Gender differences in depression. Critical review. , 2000, The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science.

[11]  S. Nolen-Hoeksema,et al.  Accounting for sex differences in depression through female victimization: Childhood sexual abuse , 1991 .

[12]  C. Zahn-Waxler,et al.  The Development of Empathy, Guilt, and Internalization of Distress , 2000 .

[13]  R. Kessler,et al.  Sex and depression in the National Comorbidity Survey. I: Lifetime prevalence, chronicity and recurrence. , 1993, Journal of affective disorders.

[14]  S. Nolen-Hoeksema Gender differences in coping with depression across the lifespan , 1995 .