Article

Negative life events and symptoms of depression and anxiety: stress causation and/or stress generation

Details

Citation

Phillips AC, Carroll D & Der G (2015) Negative life events and symptoms of depression and anxiety: stress causation and/or stress generation. Anxiety, Stress, & Coping, 28 (4), pp. 357-371. https://doi.org/10.1080/10615806.2015.1005078

Abstract
Background and Objectives: Stressful life events are known to contribute to development of depression; however, it is possible this link is bidirectional. The present study examined whether such stress generation effects are greater than the effects of stressful life events on depression, and whether stress generation is also evident with anxiety. Design: Participants were two large age cohorts (N = 732 aged 44 years; N = 705 aged 63 years) from the West of Scotland Twenty-07 study. Methods: Stressful life events, depression, and anxiety symptoms were measured twice five years apart. Cross-lagged panel analysis examined the mutual influences of stressful life events on depression and on anxiety over time. Results: Life events predicted later depressive symptomatology (p = .01), but the depression predicting life events relationship was less strong (p = .06), whereas earlier anxiety predicted life events five years later (p = .001). There was evidence of sex differences in the extent to which life events predicted later anxiety. Conclusions: This study provides evidence of stress causation for depression and weaker evidence for stress generation. In contrast, there was strong evidence of stress generation for anxiety but weaker evidence for stress causation, and that differed for men and women.

Keywords
anxiety; depression; stressful life events; stress causation; stress generation

Journal
Anxiety, Stress, & Coping: Volume 28, Issue 4

StatusPublished
FundersMedical Research Council
Publication date31/12/2015
Publication date online05/02/2015
Date accepted by journal27/12/2014
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/30032
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN1061-5806
eISSN1477-2205

People (1)

Professor Anna Whittaker

Professor Anna Whittaker

Professor of Behavioural Medicine, Sport