1 Columbia University, New York City, NY, USA.
Qual Health Res. 2019 Jan;29(1):80-95. doi: 10.1177/1049732318811702.
In India, social determinants of health, including poverty, domestic violence, and inadequate social support disproportionately affect women, leaving them more vulnerable to depression than men. We conducted a metaethnography to synthesize qualitative data from 13 studies (1987-2017) that explored women's experiences and perceptions of depression in India. We used a feminist standpoint to critically examine how gender shapes these experiences and perceptions. Indian women's experiences of depression were embedded in their social worlds. Women perceived interpersonal conflict, caregiving burden, domestic violence, financial insecurity, adverse reproductive events and widowhood as causes of depression. Women used cultural expressions to describe physical, emotional, and cognitive distress. The detrimental impact of discriminatory social conditions, gender inequalities, and traditional gender roles on Indian women's mental health highlights the need for gender-sensitive mental health research and practice that can attend to women's sociocultural context and promote values of gender equality and social justice.
在印度,包括贫困、家庭暴力和社会支持不足在内的健康社会决定因素对女性的影响不成比例,使她们比男性更容易患抑郁症。我们进行了一项荟萃元分析,综合了 13 项研究(1987-2017 年)中的定性数据,这些研究探讨了印度女性对抑郁症的体验和看法。我们使用女性主义立场来批判性地考察性别如何塑造这些体验和看法。印度女性的抑郁症体验嵌入在她们的社会世界中。女性认为人际冲突、照顾负担、家庭暴力、经济不安全、不良生殖事件和守寡是导致抑郁症的原因。女性使用文化表达来描述身体、情绪和认知上的痛苦。歧视性社会条件、性别不平等和传统性别角色对印度女性心理健康的不利影响突出表明,需要进行对性别敏感的心理健康研究和实践,关注女性的社会文化背景,并促进性别平等和社会公正的价值观。