Women who earn less than men are at increased depression risk

Internalizing negative experiences as reflective of inferior merit, may cause depression.

Update: 2016-01-06 12:20 GMT
Representational Image. (Picture Courtesy: Pixabay)
 
New York: Women who earn less than men despite having equivalent education and years of experience are over two times more likely to suffer from depression and anxiety than their male counterparts, a new study has found.
 
The researchers found that among women whose income was lower than their male counterparts, the odds of major depression were nearly 2.5 times higher than men; but the odds 
of depression among women whose income equalled or exceeded their male counterparts was no different than men. Results were similar for generalised anxiety disorder. Overall, women's odds of past-year anxiety were more than 2.5 times higher than men's. Where women's incomes were lower than their male counterparts, their odds of anxiety disorder were more than four times higher.
 
For women whose income equalled or exceeded their male counterparts, their odds of anxiety disorder were greatly decreased. The findings are based on data from a 2001-2002 US population-representative sample of 22,581 working adults ages 30-65. "Our results show that some of the gender disparities in depression and anxiety may be due to the effects of structural 
gender inequality in the workforce and beyond," said first author Jonathan Platt, a PhD student at Columbia University. "The social processes that sort women into certain jobs, compensate them less than equivalent male counterparts, and create gender disparities in domestic labour have material and psychosocial consequences," said Platt.
 
While the US has passed legislation to address some of 
the most overt forms of gender discrimination faced by working 
women, less conspicuous forms of structural discrimination persist. As examples, the researchers refer to the norms, expectations, and opportunities surrounding the types of jobs women occupy and the way those jobs are valued and compensated relative to men. "If women internalise these negative experiences as 
reflective of inferior merit, rather than the result of discrimination, they may be at increased risk for depression and anxiety disorders," said Platt.
 
"Our findings suggest that policies must go beyond prohibiting overt gender discrimination like sexual harassment," said Katherine Keyes, from Columbia University. "Further, while it is commonly believed that gender 
differences in depression and anxiety are biologically rooted, these results suggest that such differences are much more socially constructed that previously thought, indicating that gender disparities in psychiatric disorders are malleable and arise from unfair treatment," said Keyes. The study was published in the journal Social Science and Medicine

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