Rw. Simon, ASSESSING SEX-DIFFERENCES IN VULNERABILITY AMONG EMPLOYED PARENTS - THE IMPORTANCE OF MARITAL-STATUS, Journal of health and social behavior, 39(1), 1998, pp. 38-54
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Psychology, Social
Despite earlier claims that women are generally more vulnerable than m
en to stressors, recent research on mental health indicates that sex d
ifferences in vulnerability are highly specific and depend on the type
of stressor and disorder considered. My paper extends previous work o
n this topic by suggesting that gender variation in stress-reactivity
is also contingent upon people's marital status. To illustrate the imp
ortance of marital status for differential vulnerability, my study ass
esses sex differences in the impact of work and family role strains on
depression and alcohol use-abuse among married and unmarried employed
parents who participated in the second wave of the National Survey of
Households and Families (n = 2937). My analyses indicate that mothers
generally are not more vulnerable than fathers, but that sex differen
ces in parents' response to stress depend on the type of stressor and
disorder involved. My analyses also reveal significant marital status
contingencies in the effects of stress on mothers' compared to fathers
' symptoms of distress. Finally, although married and unmarried mother
s do not differ in their response to work or family stress, my analyse
s show that parental strain is more harmful to unmarried than married
fathers. Overall, my research identifies an important, though previous
ly overlook, factor influencing sex differences in vulnerability and f
urther specifies the types of stressors which are etiologically import
ant for married and unmarried mothers and fathers. I interpret finding
s from the contextual approach to differential vulnerability, arguing
and the circumstances in which stressors occur influence their meaning
, emotional significance, and psychological impact.