J Korean Neuropsychiatr Assoc.
2004 Mar;43(2):229-236.
Factors Associated with Depressive Symptoms of the Married Women - Focused on Family Relationship Satisfaction and Conflict: Coping Method
- Affiliations
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- 1Department of Psychiatry, College of Medicine, Korea University, Seoul, Korea. leeminso@korea.ac.kr
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
The purposes of this study were to investigate depressive symptoms among married women and to their understand depression through social and interpersonal factors.
METHODS
The subjects were consisted of 632 married women who lived in 00 city. They completed the Beck Depression Inventory, Marital Global Distress Scale, Dissatisfaction with Children Scale, and Conflict-coping Method Scale. Descriptive statistics, correlation, chi2-test, ANOVA, step-wise regression, and hierarchical regression were applied to analyze the data.
RESULTS
ANOVA analysis showed the differences in education, income, experience of abuse, parent-in-law relationship, marital global distress, dissatisfaction with children, rational coping, emotion/action-expression coping, and avoidant coping among the non-depressive group, mildly depressive group, and depressive group. Step-wise regression showed that the variance of the current depressive symptoms was accounted for by marital global distress, dissatisfaction with children, avoidance coping method, and satisfaction with parent-in-law (total account=36.1%). It was found that the rational coping method and avoidance coping method significantly mediated the relationship between the satisfaction with family relation and depressive symptoms.
CONCLUSION
Therapeutic interventions for the married women experiencing depressive symptoms showed include their marital relationship. Based on the finding that the conflict coping methods mediated the association between the depressive symptoms and the family relation satisfaction, the effective conflict coping skills or social problem solving skills should be included in the interventions for married women.