Cairney John, Krause Neal
Health Systems Research and Consulting Unit, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, University of Toronto, 3rd Floor Tower T320, 33 Russell Street, Toronto, ON Canada.
J Aging Health. 2005 Dec;17(6):807-35. doi: 10.1177/0898264305280985.
This study examines the associations between social position and mental health and explores whether differences in distress and depression by social position can be accounted for by differences in the major components of the stress process model. We extend previous work by including an ethnocultural measure alongside more traditional measures of social position.
Secondary data analysis of the 1994 National Population Health Survey.
Consistent with findings from studies of younger adults, mental health in later life is determined in part by age, gender, marital status, education, and ethnocultural factors. The data indicate that the life experiences connected to these social positions are largely responsible for these effects.
Our findings suggest that key social factors are related to mental health in late life, because one's position in the social structure shapes the stressors they encounter and the resources they have at their disposal to cope with them.
本研究考察社会地位与心理健康之间的关联,并探究社会地位导致的痛苦和抑郁差异是否可以通过压力过程模型主要组成部分的差异来解释。我们通过纳入一项种族文化测量指标以及更传统的社会地位测量指标,对先前的研究进行了拓展。
对1994年全国人口健康调查进行二次数据分析。
与针对年轻人的研究结果一致,晚年的心理健康部分取决于年龄、性别、婚姻状况、教育程度和种族文化因素。数据表明,与这些社会地位相关的生活经历在很大程度上造成了这些影响。
我们的研究结果表明,关键社会因素与晚年心理健康相关,因为一个人在社会结构中的地位塑造了他们所遭遇的压力源以及可用于应对这些压力源的资源。