1. Depressive symptoms, stress, and coping among women recovering from addiction.
- Author
-
Weaver GD, Turner NH, and O'Dell KJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Sampling Studies, Secondary Prevention, Surveys and Questionnaires, Texas, Time Factors, Adaptation, Psychological, Depression psychology, Marriage, Stress, Psychological psychology, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation
- Abstract
This article focuses on the variability in well-being of 102 women in continuous recovery from addiction for 1 to 5 years. Univariate and bivariate analyses of cross-sectional data on recent depressive symptomatology, and psychosocial stress and coping strategies before and during recovery yielded the following findings: (a) Nearly a third of the sample reported scores above the 16-point cut-off on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, indicating risk for depression; (b) over half had a history of diagnosed depression; (c) perceived stress in 16 life domains significantly decreased from prerecovery to recovery; (d) by recovery, participants significantly increase their use of positive strategies, but they continued use some negative ones; and (e) risk for high depressive symptomatology was greatest among those who were married or cohabiting, had a history of clinical of depression, high perceived stress in areas of money and emotional and physical health. Findings are discussed in terms of their implications for treatment and aftercare.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF