Life-stress and reactivity by gender in a longitudinal birth cohort at 30 and 35 years
McLeod, Geraldine F.H.
Life-stress and reactivity by gender in a longitudinal birth cohort at 30 and 35 years Geraldine F.H. McLeod, L. J. Horwood, D.M. Fergusson and J.M. Boden - Springer, 2016 - Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology .
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 2016, 51(10): 385–1394
Previous literature has shown gender differences in reactivity to stressful life events. However, it is unclear whether gender differences in stress reactivity are consistent across a series of life event domains among longitudinal adult sample populations.
Data were gathered from the Christchurch Health and Development Study (CHDS). Cohort members were questioned on their experience of, and distress from, a series of life event domains (interpersonal problems; victimization; illness/death; pregnancy/parenthood; employment/finance problems) spanning two age-periods 25–30 years (data collected in 2007) and 30–35 years (data collected in 2012). (From the authors' abstract). Record #5414
SEXUAL VIOLENCE
Christchurch Health and Development Study
HEALTH
INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS
LONGITUDINAL STUDIES
MEN
PARENTING
PHYSICAL ABUSE
PREGNANCY
STRESS
VICTIMS OF CRIMES
WOMEN
NEW ZEALAND
Life-stress and reactivity by gender in a longitudinal birth cohort at 30 and 35 years Geraldine F.H. McLeod, L. J. Horwood, D.M. Fergusson and J.M. Boden - Springer, 2016 - Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology .
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 2016, 51(10): 385–1394
Previous literature has shown gender differences in reactivity to stressful life events. However, it is unclear whether gender differences in stress reactivity are consistent across a series of life event domains among longitudinal adult sample populations.
Data were gathered from the Christchurch Health and Development Study (CHDS). Cohort members were questioned on their experience of, and distress from, a series of life event domains (interpersonal problems; victimization; illness/death; pregnancy/parenthood; employment/finance problems) spanning two age-periods 25–30 years (data collected in 2007) and 30–35 years (data collected in 2012). (From the authors' abstract). Record #5414
SEXUAL VIOLENCE
Christchurch Health and Development Study
HEALTH
INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS
LONGITUDINAL STUDIES
MEN
PARENTING
PHYSICAL ABUSE
PREGNANCY
STRESS
VICTIMS OF CRIMES
WOMEN
NEW ZEALAND