1. Centrality of women's multiple roles: beneficial and detrimental consequences for psychological well-being.
- Author
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Martire, Lynn M., Townsend, Aloen L., Martire, L M, Stephens, M A, and Townsend, A L
- Subjects
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WOMEN'S mental health & Sociology , *WORKING mothers , *WOMEN employees , *DIAGNOSIS of mental depression , *AGE distribution , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *MENTAL depression , *HEALTH status indicators , *MENTAL health , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *SATISFACTION , *SOCIAL role , *PSYCHOLOGY of Spouses , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *PSYCHOLOGY of women employees , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors - Abstract
Theorists have proposed that greater centrality (personal importance) of a social role is associated with better psychological well-being but that role centrality exacerbates the negative effects of stress in that same social role on well-being. The present study found evidence to support both hypotheses in a sample of 296 women who simultaneously occupied the roles of parent care provider, mother, wife, and employee. Greater centrality of all four roles was related to better psychological well-being. As predicted, wife centrality exacerbated the effects of wife stress on life satisfaction, and employee centrality exacerbated the effects of employee stress on depressive symptoms. Contrary to prediction, centrality of the mother role buffered women from the negative effects of mother stress on depressive symptoms. These findings point to an aspect of role identity that can benefit well-being but that has complex effects in the context of role stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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