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A community study on gender differences in mental health indicators and mediating effects of stalking victimization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

C. Kuehner
Affiliation:
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim, Germany
P. Gass
Affiliation:
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim, Germany
H. Dressing
Affiliation:
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim, Germany

Abstract

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Background and Aims

Studies on the impact of stalking on victims suggest that stalking may have serious psychosocial consequences. Using data from the Mannheim stalking study (Dressing, Kuehner & Gass, 2005) the present report analyses gender differences with regard to various mental health indicators and potential mediator effects of stalking victimization. Furthermore, we were interested in whether the impact of stalking on mental health was comparable for men and women.

Methods

The study included a postal survey of 675 community residents on the experience of intruding harassment and on mental health indicators.

Results

In the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-D) women scored higher on most of the subscales. Furthermore, more women fulfilled criteria for at least one threshold or sub-threshold mental disorder syndrome according to DSM-IV, and more women than men used psychotropic medication. However, identified associations were completely mediated by the higher prevalence of stalking victims in women. In contrast, the associations of stalking victimization with poor mental health, psychosocial functioning, and use of medication were largely comparable across gender.

Conclusions

Our study indicates clear associations between stalking victimization and impaired mental health, quantified at diagnostic levels in the general population. Furthermore, the experience of being a stalking victim seems to act as a substantial mediator of the associations between gender and mental health outcomes in the community.

Type
S02. Symposium: Gender Differences in Mental Health. Current Evidence from Epidemiology
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2007

References

Dressing, H., Kuehner, C., Gass, P.Lifetime prevalence and impact of stalking in a European population: epidemiological data from a middle-sized German city. Br J Psychiatry 2005; 178: 16817210.1192/bjp.187.2.168CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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