Depressed people benefit
more from marriage than others
Newswise — Depressed singles
receive greater psychological benefits from getting married than
those who are not depressed, new research shows.
While many studies have shown that
marriage helps boost well-being, most studies have looked at a
general, average population and don’t examine whether some people
were helped more by marriage than others.
“Our findings question the
common assumption that marriage is always a good choice for
all individuals,” said Adrianne Frech, co-author of the
study and a doctoral student in sociology at Ohio State
University.
Frech conducted the study with
Kristi Williams, assistant professor of sociology at Ohio State.
Williams said the study was the first to compare how depressed and
non-depressed people benefit from marriage.
“Those ‘average’ benefits of
marriage may be largely limited to people who are depressed before
they entered marriage,” Williams said. “There may not be strong
benefits for everyone.”
Frech will present their findings
Aug. 13 in Montreal at the annual meeting of the American
Sociological Association.
The researchers used data
collected by the National Survey of Families and Households, which
interviewed a representative sample of Americans in 1987-88 and then
re-interviewed them in 1992-94. They used data from 3,066 people who
were unmarried at the time of the first interview.
They measured depression using 12
questions in the survey which asked respondents the number of days
in the last week that they “felt like they could not shake off the
blues,” “slept restlessly,” or “felt lonely.”
For those who got married, the
researchers also examined measures of marital happiness and marital
conflict.
Frech said they were surprised
that depressed people in this study benefited the most from
marriage.
“We actually found the opposite of
what we expected,” Frech said. “We thought depressed people would be
less likely to benefit from marriage because the depression of one
spouse can put a strain on the marriage and undermine marital
quality.”
Indeed, the study confirmed
Williams’ previous research that found levels of marital quality and
conflict were key in determining depression levels in individuals
after marriage. As would be expected, people who report marriages
that are high in quality and low in conflict are less likely to be
depressed.
Also, the study found that
depressed people who got married reported overall lower levels of
marital quality than did individuals who were not depressed. But
even so, depressed people still benefited more psychologically from
marriage than did non-depressed people.
The results didn’t show any
differences between men and women in the links between marriage and
depression.
Although the study didn’t look at
why depressed people benefit more from marriage, the researchers
believe they may have more to gain.
“If you start out happy, you don’t
have as far to go,” Williams said. “But also, depressed people may
just be especially in need of the intimacy, the emotional closeness,
and the social support that marriage can provide.
“Marriage may give depressed
people a greater sense that they matter to someone, while people who
weren’t depressed prior to marriage may have always thought that
way.”
The researchers noted that the
people in this study had been married 5 years at most. There may
changes in the psychological benefits as the marriage progresses,
and as couples have children or get divorced.
But the results suggest that
marriage doesn’t have equal benefits for everyone.
“We can’t focus just on average
effects of marriage on well-being,” Frech said. “As this study
shows, there is a great deal of variability in the benefits of
marriage.”