Depression Flashcards

1
Q

Depression prevalence rates in women are ___x higher than in men

A

1.5-3x higher

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

F:M ratio of chronic MDD & Dysthymia is ____.

A

2:1

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

There is a significantly _________ mean level of depressed mood among females than males.

A

Higher

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

With regard to depression in children, there is no gender difference in ___________, but there is in ___________.

A

Clinical depression; depressed mood

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

At what age do gender differences in clinical depression emerge?

A

11-14 years

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

What role do sex hormones play in the prevalence of depression in women?

A

Women report changes in depressed mood associated with menopause, oral BC, and hormone replacement therapy BUT no epidemiological studies consistently found rates of MDD associated with any of these.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

How have prevalence rates of MDD changed over the last half century

A

There has been a fivefold increase in the lifetime prevalence of depression in the U.S. between 1950s and 1990s. HOWEVER despite this increase over time, age of onset and gender difference in prevalence rates remained consistent.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Which two theories about the reasons for gender differences in depression emphasize the importance of differential persistence?

A

Sex-role theories and rumination theory. Both theories imply that higher point prevalence of clinically significant depression in women than men is at least partially due to higher chronicity.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

What do sex role theories posit?

A

That chronic stress associated with traditional female roles lead to higher prevalence of depression in women than men.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

What is rumination theory? Why would that lead to more chronicity? What is the evidence against it?

A
  • Rumination theory posits that women are more likely than men to dwell on problems and thus allow transient dysphoric symptoms to grow into clinically significant depressive episodes.
  • Even though women do show more chronicity in epidemiological studies, methodological studies show that this is due to a differential recall bias. In surveys where extra steps are taken to enable participants to have better lifetime recall, the gender difference in chronicity recurrence risk of depression disappears.
  • Additionally, although epidemiological research has shown that women are significantly more likely to have days characterized by depressed mood than men, analysis of intertemporal consistency showed that women were likelier than men to have a depressed mood day ONLY following a day when they were NOT depressed. There was no gender difference in the probability of remaining depressed the day following a depressed mood day. This pattern undermines the notion that rumination grows into more clinically significant depression in women compared with men.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Some people say that higher prevalence of depression among women is due to their higher willingness to report than men. What are 3 of Kessler’s arguments against this?

A
  • Higher prevalence of current depression among women than men is found in BOTH studies that use self-report measures AND studies that use informant reports.
  • Several methodological studies using standard psychometric methods to assess potential biasing factors (e.g. social desirability, expressivity, lying, and yea- or nay-saying) have found no evidence that gender differences in self-reported psychological distress are due to these biasing factors.
  • If the response-bias argument were correct, response-bias would show higher likelihood for women to report symptoms associated with depressed mood (e.g. feeling sad, blue, or depressed for 2+ weeks) than men and NO gender difference in reports of less stigmatizing symptoms (e.g. sleep disturbance, eating disturbance, lack of energy). However, symptom level assessments show opposite findings in clinical and community samples.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

According to retrospective analyses of age of onset reports in epidemiological surveys, the prevalence of MDD has increased dramatically over the past few decades in both genders and is due to environmental factors (a cohort effect). What are some methodological limitations that would weaken this claim? What is some evidence supporting this claim?

A

Limitations

  • The evidence for a cohort effect comes almost entirely from cross-sectional surveys that use retrospective age-of-onset reports.
  • Recall failure might increase with age and would create the false impression of higher prevalence of depression in recent (i.e. younger) cohorts.
  • Current perception of depression as more stigmatizing among older generations might make them more reluctant to report compared with younger generations
  • Selective mortality or other forms of sample censoring due to depression might increase with age.

Supporting evidence

  • Several long-term prospective epidemiological surveys (which are methodologically stronger than cross-sectional retrospective surveys) suggest that the cohort effect might represent a real temporal increase.
  • The cohort effect for MDD is much more pronounced for secondary (i.e. a disorder that follows another disorder in occurrence) than primary disorders, which is unlikely to be caused by recall bias.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Some claim that environmental stresses related to sex roles increase the effects of sex hormones on depression in girls at mid-puberty. What are some findings that support this claim?

A
  • A gender difference in low self-esteem emerges in 7th grade when students are in a school system that has a middle school, but not until 9th grade when students are in a school system with only primary school and a 4-year high school.
  • Girls who physically mature early experience more psychological distress than their normal or late developing female peers. This distress is exacerbated by having mixed-sex rather than same-sex friends.
  • Age related changes in gender socialization (e.g. increased concerns with weight and relationships with boys partly explained the increase in depressed mood in girls but not boys at mid-puberty.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

What does twin research show about the gender difference in heritability of MDD?

A

There is no gender difference in heritability of MDD for adolescents and adults. It is equally strong for both.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

According to Mezulis et al (2011), What is the ABC model of gender differences in depression?

A

The ABC model integrates multiple domains of vulnerability (affective, biological and cognitive) and examines how these factors emerge and converge in adolescence to form an overall level of depressogenic vulnerability. This model also accounts employs the concept of equifinality, which is the idea that people can arrive at the same psychological outcome via different developmental pathways.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

What are 3 of the 6 developmental models proposed in the ABC model? Give an example of each.

A
  • Developmental model 1 – the causes of depression are the same for boys and girls but an important causal factor becomes more prevalent for girls than boys in early adolescence. Examples of factors in our model that may fit this pattern is are negative cognitive style and stress
  • Developmental model 2 – the causes of depression are somewhat diff for girls & boys, and levels of the causes for girls rise in early adolescence. Examples of such a factor might be objectified body consciousness or gonadal hormones (testosterone and estrogen).
  • Developmental model 3 – girls are higher in vulnerabilities for depression even before adolescence and that the increase in negative life events in adolescence combines with the vulnerabilities to produce depression. (stress-diathesis model)
17
Q

According to Mezulis et al, what is affective vulnerability? Give a finding related to depression.

A

Individual differences in emotionality—both baseline emotionality as well as emotional reactivity and recovery.

  • Low positive emotionality may be uniquely assoc. w/depression, whereas high neg emotionality is a nonspecific factor predictive of both depression and anxiety.
18
Q

According to Mezulis et al, what is biological vulnerability? Give a finding related to depression.

A

Biological factors that may contribute to depression include genetics, pubertal hormones, and pubertal timing.

  • Twin studies found that depression was moderately heritable, with 37% of the variance due to additive genetic effects.
  • Genotyping studies support a vulnerability stress model in which the short allele of the serotonin transporter gene confers a vulnerability to depression. When combined with stressors, depression is a likely outcome. (stress diathesis?)
19
Q

What is the strongest evidence of biological factors contributing to depression according to the Mezulis et al?

A

Genotyping studies support a vulnerability stress model in which the short allele of the serotonin transporter gene confers a vulnerability to depression. When combined with stressors, depression is a likely outcome. (stress diathesis?)

20
Q

What do we know about the effects of hormones or pubertal development on gender differences in depression?

A

We can’t reach a definitive conclusion re: the effects of hormones or pubertal development on gender differences in depression

21
Q

According to Mezulis et al, what is cognitive vulnerability?

A

Comprised of 3 factors, negative cognitive style, rumination, and objectified body consciousness

22
Q

What is negative cognitive style?

A

The tendency to make negative inferences about cause, self, & future following stressful life events. This vulnerability factor is posited by the hopelessness theory of depression (internal, global, and stable).

23
Q

What is rumination?

A

The tendency to think repetitively and passively about negative events and the negative affect elicited by them.

24
Q

What is objectified body consciousness?

A

The tendency to view one’s body as an object to be viewed & evaluated.

25
Q

Some claim that gender difference in depression prevalence is partly due to prior anxiety (i.e. anxiety mediates the relationship between gender and depression). What is a finding supporting this claim and what are some limitations?

A

In a community survey, the odds-ratio of gender predicting MDD decreases substantially when controlling for prior anxiety. However, this finding focuses on a predictor that is characteristic of women (e.g. anxiety) while ignoring other comparable predictors that are more characteristic of men (e.g. substance abuse, CD). In a subsequent study where the model controlled for both female and male predictors, the odds ratio was the same as the model with no controls.