4.0 Article

Cross-National Associations Between Gender and Mental Disorders in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys

Journal

ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 66, Issue 7, Pages 785-795

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2009.36

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. US National Institute of Mental Health [R01MH070884]
  2. John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
  3. Pfizer Foundation [R13-MH066849, R01-MH069864, R01 DA016558]
  4. US Public Health Service [FIRCA R03-TW006481]
  5. Fogarty International Center
  6. Pan American Health Organization
  7. Eli Lilly & Company Foundation
  8. Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical Inc
  9. GlaxoSmithKline
  10. Bristol-Myers Squibb
  11. National Institute of Psychiatry Ramon de la Fuente [INPRFMDIES 4280]
  12. National Council on Science and Technology [CONACyT-G30544-H]
  13. Lebanese Ministry of Public Health
  14. World Health Organization (Lebanon)
  15. Janssen Cilag, Eli Lilly
  16. Roche
  17. Novartis
  18. Fogerty [R03 TW0006481]
  19. European Commission [QLG5-199901042, SANCO2004123]
  20. Piedmont Region (Italy)
  21. Fondo de Investigacion Sanitaria
  22. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Spain) [FIS 00/0028]
  23. Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnologia (Spain) [SAF 2000-158-CE]
  24. Departament de Salut
  25. Generalitat de Catalunya (Spain)
  26. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [CIBER CB06/02/0046, RETICS RD06/0011]
  27. Ministry of Social Protection
  28. Japan Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare [H13-SHOGAI-023, H14-TOKUBETSU-026, H16-KOKORO-013]
  29. New Zealand Ministry of Health
  30. Alcohol Advisory Council
  31. Health Research Council
  32. South African Department of Health
  33. University of Michigan
  34. National Institutes of Mental Health [HHSN271200700030C]
  35. National Institute of Mental Health [U01-MH60220]
  36. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation [044780]
  37. John W. Alden Trust

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Context: Gender differences in mental disorders, including more anxiety and mood disorders among women and more externalizing disorders among men, are found consistently in epidemiological surveys. The gender roles hypothesis suggests that these differences narrow as the roles of women and men become more equal. Objectives: To study time-space (cohort-country) variation in gender differences in lifetime DSM-IV mental disorders across cohorts in 15 countries in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Survey Initiative and to determine if this variation is significantly related to time-space variation in female gender role traditionality as measured by aggregate patterns of female education, employment, marital timing, and use of birth control. Design: Face-to-face household surveys. Setting: Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and the Pacific. Participants: Community-dwelling adults (N=72 933). Main Outcome Measures: The World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview assessed lifetime prevalence and age at onset of 18 DSM-IV anxiety, mood, externalizing, and substance disorders. Survival analyses estimated time-space variation in female to male odds ratios of these disorders across cohorts defined by the following age ranges: 18 to 34, 35 to 49, 50 to 64, and 65 years and older. Structural equation analysis examined predictive effects of variation in gender role traditionality on these odds ratios. Results: In all cohorts and countries, women had more anxiety and mood disorders than men, and men had more externalizing and substance disorders than women. Although gender differences were generally consistent across cohorts, significant narrowing was found in recent cohorts for major depressive disorder and substance disorders. This narrowing was significantly related to temporal (major depressive disorder) and spatial (substance disorders) variation in gender role traditionality. Conclusions: While gender differences in most lifetime mental disorders were fairly stable over the time-space units studied, substantial intercohort narrowing of differences in major depression was found to be related to changes in the traditionality of female gender roles. Additional research is needed to understand why this temporal narrowing was confined to major depression.

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