Department of Sociology, Lehman College, City University of New York, Bronx, NY 10468, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2011 Dec;52(4):444-59. doi: 10.1177/0022146511410432. Epub 2011 Oct 21.
Despite recent increases in life course research on mental illness, important questions remain about the social patterning of, and explanations for, depression trajectories among women in later life. The authors investigate competing theoretical frameworks for the age patterning of depressive symptoms and the physical health, socioeconomic, and family mechanisms differentiating black and white women. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Mature Women, the authors use linear mixed (growth curve) models to estimate trajectories of distress for women aged 52 to 81 years (N = 3,182). The results demonstrate that: (1) there are persistently higher levels of depressive symptoms among black women relative to white women throughout later life; (2) physical health and socioeconomic status account for much of the racial gap in depressive symptoms; and (3) marital status moderates race differences in distress. The findings highlight the importance of physical health, family, and socioeconomic status in racial disparities in mental health.
尽管近年来关于精神疾病的生命历程研究有所增加,但关于老年女性抑郁轨迹的社会模式和解释仍存在重要问题。作者研究了竞争理论框架,以解释抑郁症状的年龄模式以及区分黑人和白人女性的身体健康、社会经济和家庭机制。利用成熟女性国家纵向调查的数据,作者使用线性混合(增长曲线)模型来估计年龄在 52 至 81 岁的女性的痛苦轨迹(n=3182)。结果表明:(1)在整个晚年,黑人女性的抑郁症状水平始终高于白人女性;(2)身体健康和社会经济地位解释了抑郁症状中很大一部分的种族差距;(3)婚姻状况调节了痛苦中的种族差异。研究结果强调了身体健康、家庭和社会经济地位在心理健康方面的种族差异中的重要性。