McDonnell Cadhla, Gracia Pablo
Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Cerdanyola del Vallès, Spain.
Front Sociol. 2024 Dec 4;9:1498987. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2024.1498987. eCollection 2024.
Lone mothers have been found to report lower average mental health than partnered mothers. Following the 'stress process model', disparities in women's mental health by family structure could be explained by lone mothers' higher exposure to multiple forms of stressors, compared to partnered mothers. Yet, this hypothesis has not been tested in previous studies. This study analysed four waves of longitudinal data from the study, spanning between the year when women gave birth (2008) to 9 years later (2017) ( = 5,654 women), to examine how family stressors (i.e., financial strain, caregiving strain, work-related strain, and parental conflict) influence mothers' depressive symptoms by family structure. Analyses applied random-effects models and Karlson-Holm-Breen (KHB) decomposition techniques, combined with different model specifications as robustness checks (i.e., fixed-effects). Results indicate that: (1) net of sociodemographic factors, lone mothers experience higher levels of depressive symptoms than partnered mothers, with additional analyses confirming that transitioning from partnered to lone mother is associated with higher depressive symptoms, and from lone to partnered mother with reduced depressive symptoms; (2) although 41% of the observed statistical association between family structure and mothers' depressive symptoms is direct, a larger 59% of this mental health gap is mediated by inequalities between lone and partnered mothers in their exposure to family stressors; and (3) the largest share of the observed mediation by family stressors is explained by lone mothers' higher risks of current and past caregiving strain and parental conflict, but also by their current higher financial strain. Overall, this study suggests that lone mothers' lower mental health, compared to partnered mothers, is largely explained by disparities in exposure to family stressors, pointing to how accumulated caregiving and parental stressors, as well as poverty risks, are key explanatory factors behind the mental well-being disadvantage that lone mothers face.
研究发现,与有伴侣的母亲相比,单身母亲报告的平均心理健康水平较低。根据“压力过程模型”,家庭结构导致的女性心理健康差异可以解释为,与有伴侣的母亲相比,单身母亲更容易受到多种形式的压力源影响。然而,这一假设在以往的研究中尚未得到验证。本研究分析了该研究的四波纵向数据,时间跨度从女性分娩年份(2008年)到9年后(2017年)(n = 5654名女性),以考察家庭压力源(即经济压力、照顾压力、工作相关压力和亲子冲突)如何通过家庭结构影响母亲的抑郁症状。分析采用随机效应模型和卡尔森 - 霍尔姆 - 布林(KHB)分解技术,并结合不同的模型设定作为稳健性检验(即固定效应)。结果表明:(1)在扣除社会人口学因素后,单身母亲的抑郁症状水平高于有伴侣的母亲,进一步分析证实,从有伴侣母亲转变为单身母亲与更高的抑郁症状相关,而从单身母亲转变为有伴侣母亲则与抑郁症状减轻相关;(2)虽然家庭结构与母亲抑郁症状之间观察到的统计关联中有41%是直接关联,但这种心理健康差距中更大的59%是由单身母亲和有伴侣母亲在接触家庭压力源方面的不平等所介导的;(3)家庭压力源观察到的中介作用中,最大部分是由单身母亲当前和过去照顾压力及亲子冲突的较高风险所解释,但也由她们当前较高的经济压力所解释。总体而言,本研究表明,与有伴侣的母亲相比单身母亲心理健康水平较低,很大程度上是由接触家庭压力源的差异所解释的,这指出了累积的照顾压力和亲子压力源以及贫困风险是单身母亲面临心理健康劣势的关键解释因素。