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DEPRESSION DURING EARLY RECOVERY FROM HEART SURGERY AMONG EARLY MIDDLE-AGE,MIDLIFE, AND ELDERLY WOMEN
Authors:Sandra Plach  Linda Napholz  Sheryl Kelber
Affiliation:1. School of Nursing, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA;2. Napa Valley College, Napa, California, USA;3. University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
Abstract:Theories and studies about the psychological processes of midlife propose a transition that may result in a more integrated personality structure throughout the second half of life. This more integrated structure includes concepts such as generativity, self-assertion, and independence. However, this structure, especially in early middle-age, can be affected by a life-threatening health disruption such as heart disease. One hundred and fifty-five women participated in a cross-sectional survey designed to investigate depression in early middle age, midlife, and elderly women who had undergone heart surgery. Women aged 40–55 years composed the early middle-age group, women aged 56–65 years composed the midlife age group, and women aged 66+ years were identified as the elderly age group. Affective components of depression were measured by asking participants to respond to three items regarding frequency of sadness, depression, and “the blues.” Affective depression scores were summed and a mean score derived. Mean scores significantly differed by age group (F [2, 152] = 3.05, p =. 05). Older women in the study fared better than their younger counterparts in terms of depression scores after a major cardiac health disruption. Post hoc comparisons indicated that mean scores for the early middle-age participants were significantly higher than for the midlife and older participants. Depression in the context of a cardiac health disruption appears to be linked to the developmental stage of a woman’s life trajectory on which it is superimposed.
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