Lecture plan
I. Concurrent association
D. Based on 3,000 interview
--
Risk same for
men and women, but 2 times more W than M
classified as
depressed
E. 1993 study: 328 newly marrieds
MD spouse 10
times greater risk than NMD spouse for depression
Same finding
controlling for other spouse's MS and Depression
F. Improving depression not increase DAS
G. Treating depression does NOT improve relationship
B. 1993 study of 50 women
with recent significant negative
marital
events (NME) (abuse, affairs):
Excluded
W with prior major depressive episode:
36% of the women with NME showed
major depressive episode
NOTE: 36% >> than point prevalence which is 7 - 8 %
Also, >>
self-reported attributions (between event and depression)
T-1: r = -.35 T-2: r = -.56
T-2 >> T-1
C. Different study:
Weiss's
MSI predicted BDI 2 years later, DAS did not!
DAS predicted
measures of anxiety
Severe
entrenched conflict predicts to BDI
D. Recent studies:
Husband
premarital dysphoria --> Marital Distress
MD could
be correlated with choice of an unreliable partner
E. Summary:
Marital
Distress ---> Depression
For Depressed-Distressed
group --
W depressive
behavior --> REDUCTION of H aggressive
behaviors
BUT--- the suppression effect is a function of
years married;
true for briefer relationships, not for longer
Long term
marital discord is the key to depression!
B. Specific Cognitive Errors: MADOPS
With depressed spouses one often sees evidence
for these fallacies
of thought:
M
Magnification and minimization
Event
far more/less significant
A
Arbitrary inference
Specific conclusion
no supporting facts
D
Dichotomous thinking
Either/or experience
O
Over generalization
General rule
from single instance; applying it too broadly
P
Personalization
Attributing external
events to self
S
Selective abstraction
Conceptualizing a
situation on basis of detail taken out of context
C.
Attributional dynamics (review)
Fincham, Beach, Harold, and Osborne (1997) Psychological
Science, 8, 351-357.
I. The Study
C. Stability: Time 1 to Time 2
Satisfaction (DAS) and Depression (BDI) quite
stable:
DAS T1 to T2: .61 and .56 (H & W, respectively)
BDI T1 to T2: .56 and .45 (H & W, respectively)
D. Concurrent: DAS vs. BDI
Time 1 to 1: -.28 and .-45 (H & W, respectively)
Time 2 to 2: -.48 and -.57 (H & W, respectively
E. Cross Lagged rs: Time 1 to Time 2 [ Not a causal model ]
For Wives--
Only uni-directional
influence , their initial DAS predicted their
subsequent BDI (DAS
· BDI)
And --
Effect of BDI -->
DAS STRONGER for Husbands than for Wives
Beach, S. R. H., Sandeen E. E., &
O'Leary, K. D. (1990). Depression
in Marriage:
A Model Etiology and Treatment. NY: Guilford Press
Steven Beach found empirical support in the literature
for the following
factors associated with depression in marriage:
Absence of --