37 research outputs found

    The Daily Consequences of Widowhood: The Role of Gender and Intergenerational Transfers on subsequent Housework Performance

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142738/1/Nesse-Carr-House_Perf-JFI-2004.pd

    Stress and coping patterns of participants and non-participants in self-help groups for parents of the mentally ill

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    The authors examined differences in stress and coping patterns as well as in situationally-related variables between participants and non-participants in self-help groups for parents of the mentally ill in Israel. Participants, who were higher on socio-economic status indicators, reported coping patterns that tended to be both more active and interactive. They also reported greater concerns around psycho-social issues than non-participants. The authors discuss the possible interrelationships among these findings.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/44305/1/10597_2004_Article_BF00752453.pd

    The impact of widowhood on depression: findings from a prospective survey

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    Background. We investigated the impact of widowhood on depression and how resources and contextual factors that define the meaning of loss modified this effect.Method. In a prospective, nationally representative sample of women in the US aged 54 or older we compared 64 women who were widowed in the 3 years between data collection waves with 431 women who were stably married over the time interval.Results. Those who became widowed reported more depression than controls for 2 years following the loss. However, this effect was confined to respondents whose husbands were not ill at baseline. Widowed women whose husbands were ill at baseline already had elevated depression in the baseline interview and did not become significantly more depressed after the death. Consistent with this result, women who were not depressed pre-bereavement were most vulnerable to depression following the loss of an ill spouse during the first year of widowhood.Conclusions. Results suggest that spouses' illness may forewarn wives of their impending loss and these women may begin to grieve before his death. Those forewarned women who are not depressed pre-bereavement may experience the most post-bereavement depression. Findings are discussed in light of previous, more methodologically limited studies

    Prospective patterns of resilience and maladjustment during widowhood

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142762/1/Bonanno-Nesse-Resil_Maladj_Patterns-PsychAging-2004.pd
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