Stress and Coping Styles to students
Anuradha (2001) has found that depressive disorders, incorporate a
spectrum of psychological functions which vary considerably in severity,
frequency and duration. A critical issue in research of depression and its
correlation with other variables is the frequency and expression of depressive
cognitions and behaviours. This study examines the role of psychological and
coping factors in depression by studying a group of 130 female and 132 male
college and university students. Initial depression is the major predictor of
final depression, subjects who are already depressed tend to be depressed
when examined after 3-6 months and contributed significantly in the major
depression.
Satapathy and Singhal (2001) compared stress, self-esteem,
depression and academic performance of visually and hearing impaired
adolescents. Results reveal that visually impaired are less stressed and
depressed, has higher self esteem and academic performance than the hearing
impaired adolescents. Hearing impaired adolescents also exhibit more
number of behaviour problems.
In their study Abela and Payne (2003) tested the stress and symptom
components of the integration of the hopelessness and self-esteem theories of
depression in a sample of third-and seventh-grade children. The results
support the integrative theory and reveal that depressogenic inferential styles
interacted with negative events to predict increases in hopelessness but not
nonhopelessness depression symptoms in boys with low but not high selfesteem. At the
same time, contrary to the integrative theory, depressogenic
inferential styles interact with negative events to predict increases in
hopelessness but not nonhopelessness depression symptoms in girls with
high but not low self-esteem.
Women commonly experience depression in response to interpersonal
life events, and also they contribute to the occurrence of stressful events and
life contexts. Hammen (2003) studied child rearing and parenting; romantic
and marital relationship; generation of stressful life events; enduring social
dysfunction even when not depressed. He found that depressed women are
often locked into maladaptive interpersonal environments that contribute to
the reoccurrence or chronicity of depression.
The study by Dumont and Provost (2004) examined group differences
on self-esteem, social support, different strategies of coping and different
aspects of social life among 297 adolescents. Groups were classified into 3 based on
the scores of depressive symptom and frequency of daily hassles
namely, well adjusted, resilient and vulnerable. The results reveal that well
adjusted adolescents have higher self-esteem than adolescents in the 2 other
groups; resilient adolescents have higher self-esteem than vulnerable
adolescents. The resilient and vulnerable adolescents have higher scores on
antisocial and illegal activities than well adjusted adolescents. Finally
resilient adolescents have higher scores on problem-solving coping strategies
than adolescents in the two other groups.
Schorder (2004) conducted a study to test the utility of the Coping
Competence Questionnaire (CCQ) in predicting depression among chronic
disease patients. Hierarchical multiple regressions indicate moderator effects
of coping competence in the relationship between symptom stress and
depression. Symptom stress is strongly correlated with depression among
patients who were low in coping competence only. Among patients high in
coping competence, depression is low and unaffected by symptom stress.
In a significant study, Waaktaar et al. (2004) measured the depressive
symptoms in a cohort of community based adolescents (n=163) at two timepoints, with
1 year intervening. Depressive symptoms are found as increasing
from time 1 to time 2. The effect being stronger for girls than for boys.
Depressive symptoms show significant correlation with concurrent measures
of recent stressful life events. Previous level of depressive symptoms could
predict stressful life events. This demonstrates that a unidirectional model of stressful
life events prevails as the cause of depressive symptoms in
adolescents.
Stress is a crucial factor leading to depression in adolescents. It is the
internal feeling of unhappiness and unwanted tensions which results from
several deleterious changes associated with age such as, reduced income, loss
of loved ones, reduced social support, poor social interactions and over
dependency may increase the vulnerability of depression among adolescents
(Singh, 2005).
Lovejoy and Steuerwald (2005) examined the stress patterns of
individuals with cyclothymia, intermittent depression and no affective
disorder in a non clinical sample. Individuals with cyclothymia and
intermittent depression are reported a higher number of daily stressors than
normal controls. They also rated their most unpleasant daily experiences
more negatively. The authors concluded that the stress generation
mechanisms and negative cognitions may lead to the development of major
affective disorders.
The study conducted by Yukawa (2005) investigated sex differences
in the relationship among anger, depression and coping strategies. Analyses
show that women who reported themselves as angry tended to cope with
stress by optimistic and active strategies, while women who reported
themselves as depressed tended to cope with stress by withdrawn and passive
strategies. Men who reported being depressed tended to select emotion focused
cognitive coping, while men who reported being angry selected no
specific coping.
A study by Li, Diuseppe and Forb (2006) investigated the roles of
coping and masculinity in higher rates of depressive symptoms among
adolescent girls, as compared to boys. The Reynolds Adolescent Depression
Scale and the Bem Sex Role Inventory and measures of coping with general
stressors were completed by 246 adolescents. Results show that adolescent
girls are more depressed than boys and that girls use more emotion-focused
and ruminative coping than do boys. Greater degrees of ruminative coping
are related to high levels of depressive symptoms. Problem-focused and
distractive coping are positively correlated with masculinity and negatively
associated with depression. Girls are more like to use problem-focused
coping. Problem focused and distractive coping are found to mediate the
negative relationship between masculinity and depression.
Madu and Roos (2006) examined the level of maternal depressive
symptoms and ways of coping among mothers with pre-term infants as
compared with those of 50 mothers with full-term babies. A positive
correlation is found between the seeking social support coping strategy and
higher levels of depression among mothers of pre-term infants. A positive
correlation is also found among mothers of full-term infants who used the
“Accepting Responsibility” coping strategy and higher levels of depression.
Hankin, Mermelstein and Roesch (2007) examed stress exposure and
reactivity models as explanations for why girls exhibit greater levels of
depressive symptoms than boys. Girls report more depressive symptoms and
stressors in certain contexts than boys. The longitudinal direction of effects
between depression and stressors varies depending on the stressors domain.
Gils reacted more strongly to stressors in the form of depression.
The study by Fletta, Besserb and Hewitt (2007) examined the
associations among dimensions of perfectionism, self-perception and
depression. The results indicate that both self perception and socially
prescribed perfectionism are associated significantly with depression.
Statistical tests of moderator effects indicate that socially prescribed
perfectionism and self perception predict elevated levels of depression.