Psychiatry research
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Psychiatry research · Jun 2009
Comparative StudyCoping strategies and their correlates with depression in the Japanese general population.
This study's aim was to examine the relation between depression and stress-coping strategy among the general population. The survey was conducted in June 2000, using a large sample representative of the Japanese general population. A total of 24,551 responses from individuals aged 20 years or older were analyzed. ⋯ There was no marked gender difference in the prevalence of a problem-solving strategy, while various types of gender differences were found with respect to the prevalence of emotion-focused and avoidant strategies. In relation to depression, multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed the significantly highest odds ratios (OR) for avoidant coping strategies and the lowest OR for problem-focused ones in both genders. The fact that depression was associated positively with avoidant strategies but negatively with problem-solving strategies indicates that individual stress-coping strategies have their own significance with respect to depression, and may be utilized in establishing an evidence-based cognitive behavioral approach to depressive patients.