Relationship of perceived stress with depression: complete mediation by perceived control and anxiety in Iran and the United States.

This study sought to clarify the importance and cross-cultural relevance of associations between generalized perceived stress and depression. Also tested was the hypothesis that perceived stress would correlate more strongly with anxiety than with depression, whereas control would be more predictive of depression than of anxiety. Relationships between perceived stress, anxiety, depression, and perceived control were examined in samples of Iranian (n = 191) and American (n = 197) undergraduates. Correlations among these variables were generally similar across the two societies. Perceived stress did predict anxiety better than depression, but perceptions of control predicted depression significantly better than anxiety only in the United States. Best fitting structural equation models revealed that anxiety and perceived control completely accounted for the linkage between perceived stress and depression in both societies. An equally acceptable and more parsimonious model described perceived stress as a consequence rather than as an antecedent of anxiety and perceived control. Structural equation models were essentially identical across the two cultures except that internal control displayed a significant negative relationship with anxiety only in Iran. This result seemed to disconfirm any possible suggestion that a supposedly individualistic process like internal control could have no noteworthy role within a presumably more collectivistic Muslim society like Iran. Overall, these data documented the importance of anxiety and perceived control in explaining the perceived stress-depression relationship cross-culturally and therefore questioned the usefulness of perceived stress in predicting depression. Whether this understanding of the stress-depression relationship deserves general acceptance will require additional studies that measure the frequency of stressful life events and that utilize a longitudinal design.

[1]  R. Lazarus Psychological stress and the coping process , 1970 .

[2]  A. Beekman,et al.  Anxiety and depression in later life: Co-occurrence and communality of risk factors. , 2000, The American journal of psychiatry.

[3]  R. Kessler,et al.  The effects of stressful life events on depression. , 1997, Annual review of psychology.

[4]  P. Watson,et al.  Private Self-Consciousness Factors: Relationships With Need for Cognition, Locus of Control, and Obsessive Thinking in Iran and the United States , 2004, The Journal of social psychology.

[5]  Albert Bandura,et al.  Exercise of personal agency through the self-efficacy mechanism. , 1992 .

[6]  S. Folkman,et al.  Stress, appraisal, and coping , 1974 .

[7]  H. Markus,et al.  Culture and the self: Implications for cognition, emotion, and motivation. , 1991 .

[8]  S. Mineka,et al.  Comorbidity of anxiety and depressive disorders: A helplessness-hopelessness perspective. , 1990 .

[9]  E. Imamoğlu Individualism and Collectivism in a Model and Scale of Balanced Differentiation and Integration , 1998 .

[10]  M. Seligman,et al.  Learned helplessness in humans: critique and reformulation. , 1978, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[11]  P. Watson,et al.  Individualist and collectivist values: evidence of compatibility in Iran and the United States , 2003 .

[12]  P. Watson,et al.  Relationships of Experiential and Reflective Self-Knowledge with Trait Meta-Mood Scale, Constructive Thinking Inventory, and the Five Factors in Iranian Managers , 2006, Psychological reports.

[13]  Hardiness Scales in Iranian Managers: Evidence of Incremental Validity in Relationships with the Five Factor Model and with Organizational and Psychological Adjustment , 2005, Psychological reports.

[14]  R. Kline Principles and practice of structural equation modeling, 2nd ed. , 2005 .

[15]  P. Watson,et al.  Self-reported emotional intelligence: Construct similarity and functional dissimilarity of higher-order processing in Iran and the United States , 2002 .

[16]  T. Kamarck,et al.  A global measure of perceived stress. , 1983, Journal of health and social behavior.

[17]  D H Barlow,et al.  The development of anxiety: the role of control in the early environment. , 1998, Psychological bulletin.

[18]  R. Snaith,et al.  The hospital anxiety and depression scale. , 2013, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica.

[19]  M. Zimmerman,et al.  A Longitudinal Analysis of Stress in African American Youth: Predictors and Outcomes of Stress Trajectories , 2003 .

[20]  P. Watson,et al.  Two facets of self-knowledge: cross-cultural development of measures in Iran and the United States. , 2003, Genetic, social, and general psychology monographs.

[21]  Rex B. Kline,et al.  Principles and Practice of Structural Equation Modeling , 1998 .

[22]  C. Clements,et al.  Perceptions of Control: Determinants and Mechanisms , 1993 .

[23]  A. Bandura Self-efficacy mechanism in human agency , 2024, Psihologìâ ì suspìlʹstvo.

[24]  D H Barlow,et al.  The influence of an illusion of control on panic attacks induced via inhalation of 5.5% carbon dioxide-enriched air. , 1989, Archives of general psychiatry.

[25]  A. Baum,et al.  Toward an integrative approach to the study of stress. , 1984, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[26]  A. Yarcheski,et al.  A Causal Model of Depression in Early Adolescents , 2000, Western journal of nursing research.

[27]  H. Markus,et al.  Yin and Yang of the Japanese self: The cultural psychology of personality coherence. , 1999 .

[28]  R. W. Rogers,et al.  The Self-Efficacy Scale: Construction and Validation , 1982 .

[29]  M. Sherer,et al.  Construct Validation of the Self-Efficacy Scale , 1983 .

[30]  H. Cooper,et al.  The desirability of control , 1979 .

[31]  H. Levenson,et al.  Multidimensional locus of control in psychiatric patients. , 1973, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[32]  E. Skinner A guide to constructs of control. , 1996, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[33]  Shinobu Kitayama,et al.  The cultural construction of self and emotion: Implications for social behavior. , 1994 .

[34]  A. Bandura Human agency in social cognitive theory. , 1989, The American psychologist.

[35]  J. E. Maddux,et al.  Self-Efficacy and Depression , 1995 .

[36]  P. Bentler,et al.  Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis : Conventional criteria versus new alternatives , 1999 .

[37]  C. Mazure,et al.  Self-efficacy as a mediator between stressful life events and depressive symptoms , 2000, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[38]  Two facets of self-knowledge, the Five-Factor Model, and promotions among Iranian managers , 2004 .

[39]  P. Watson,et al.  Personality, stress and mental health: evidence of relationships in a sample of Iranian managers , 2000 .