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1 - Pubertal development and the emergence of the gender gap in mood disorders: A developmental and evolutionary synthesis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2009

Nicholas B. Allen
Affiliation:
ORYGEN Research Centre and Department of Psychology, University of Melbourne, Australia
Anna Barrett
Affiliation:
ORYGEN Research Centre and Department of Psychology, University of Melbourne, Australia
Lisa Sheeber
Affiliation:
Oregon Research Institute, Eugene, OR, USA
Betsy Davis
Affiliation:
Oregon Research Institute, Eugene, OR, USA
David Castle
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne
Jayashri Kulkarni
Affiliation:
Monash University, Victoria
Kathryn M. Abel
Affiliation:
University of Manchester
Jill Goldstein
Affiliation:
Harvard Medical School
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Summary

This book addresses mood and anxiety disorders in women. It takes a broad developmental approach, aimed at understanding and offering appropriate treatment for women with such disorders. The primary aim of this first chapter is to examine the emergence of the gender gap in depressive disorders at puberty, and to compare alternative theories as to the factors that underpin gender differentiation in depression at this developmental stage. These models are synthesised using an evolutionary perspective on gender differences to integrate the insights provided by socialisation, life stress, and biological models of pubertal development. Anxiety and anxiety disorders are addressed only peripherally, given the relative paucity of research in this area.

The emergence of gender differences in affective disorders during adolescence

Perhaps the most robust finding in psychiatric epidemiology is that the rate of unipolar depression is higher among females than it is among males (Weissman et al., 1996). Females are nearly twice as likely as males to experience case-level depression diagnoses (Kessler et al., 1994; McGrath et al., 1990; Nolen-Hoeksema, 1990; Weissman & Klerman, 1977), and this finding holds true across a variety of cultures and racial/ethnic groups (Gater et al., 1998). Furthermore, studies of nonclinical depressed mood states have shown that females experience more symptoms during episodes of depressed mood than do males (Wilhelm et al., 1998).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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