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Revisiting the effect of marital support on depressive symptoms in mothers and fathers: A genetically informed study.
Authors:Beam  Christopher R; Horn  Erin E; Hunt  Stacy Karagis; Emery  Robert E; Turkheimer  Eric; Martin  Nick
Abstract:This article uses a genetically informed design to evaluate whether (1) the well-documented association between marital support and depressive symptoms is accounted for by genetic and/or shared environmental selection, (2) gender differences are found after controlling for selection effects, and (3) parenthood moderates any nonshared environmental relation between depressive symptoms and marital support. We used a sample of 1,566 pairs of same-sexed, married twins from the Australian Twin Registry to evaluate our hypotheses that (1) the predicted effect of marital support on depressive symptoms is not fully an artifact of selection, (2) the etiological sources accounting for this effect differ between husbands and wives, and (3) parenthood status moderates the effect of marital support on depressive symptoms adjusting for selection effects. The results support the first hypotheses. However, after controlling for selection, the effect of marital support on depressive symptoms was not significantly different for husbands and wives. Parenthood moderated the effect of marital support, such that after controlling for selection, marital support is more strongly associated with depressive symptoms for full-time parents than nonfull-time parents. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:behavior genetics  depression  depressive symptoms  interpersonal relationships  marital support  shared environment  environmental selection
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