Pg. Surtees et Pm. Miller, PARTNERS IN ADVERSITY .3. MOOD STATUS AFTER THE EVENT, European archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience, 243(6), 1994, pp. 311-318
This paper presents further results from a longitudinal study of three
groups of married women undertaken in Edinburgh. Each group shared a
common stressful experience. In the first group the marital partner ha
d recently died; in the second the marital partner had recently experi
enced a myocardial infarction (MI) and the third group consisted of wo
men recently entering a Women's Aid refuge. Interviews were completed
shortly following the adverse experiences and where possible again abo
ut 3 months later. This report presents details of the (self-reported)
mood status of the respondents at both assessment occasions in terms
of the degree, form and change in symptomatic distress over what were
equivalent time periods for the three groups. Mood status was determin
ed on the basis of the conventionally scored 30-item GHQ (General Heal
th Questionnaire) and according to a criterion-based scoring procedure
. On this basis at initial interview almost 8 out of 10 of the widows
were above the advised GHQ cut-point, almost 6 out of 10 of the refuge
seekers and over 4 out of 10 of the coronary wives. At follow-up thes
e proportions had almost halved for the widows and coronary wives but
had changed very little for those few refuge-seekers successfully re-i
nterviewed. According to a criterion-based measure at initial intervie
w, the recent widows had an anxiety rate 5.2 times and a depression ra
te ten times that of a general population sample of women. Details of
the changes in mood status amongst the groups over the follow-up are p
resented.