1. Urban Neighborhoods, Stress, Gender and Depression: a factorial ecology.
- Author
-
Matheson, Flora I., Moineddin, Rahim, Creatore, Maria Isabella, Gozdyra, Piotr, Glazier, Richard H., and Dunn, James R.
- Subjects
MENTAL depression ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,COMMUNITY relations ,SOCIAL groups ,FACTOR analysis - Abstract
Objective: Research indicates that features of the social environment in which we live are important predictors of healthy lives. This study adopts an ecological approach to examine stress and depression by exploring markers of stress at the neighborhood-level and their impact on population-level depression. Methods: We examine this relationship using a 2001 national Canadian probability sample of 49,700 respondents living in 3,220 urban census tracts and 2001 census data. Results: Findings for the full sample and separate analyses for males and females show that: (1) neighborhood stability reduces the risk (odds) of area-level depression, and (2) material deprivation increases the risk (odds) of area-level depression. Findings for the full sample and for men show that: (1) ethnic diversity decreases the risk (odds) of area-level depression, and (2) dependency increases the risk (odds) of area-level depression. Ethnic diversity and dependency were not significantly associated with area-level depression for women. Conclusions: We discuss possibilities for the differential effect of ethnic diversity and dependency on male and female area-level depression with respect to the healthy immigrant effect and population structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005