Sex Differences in Coping Behavior: A Meta-Analytic Review and an Examination of Relative Coping
University of Pittsburgh · Carnegie Mellon University
Abstract
We used meta-analysis to examine recent studies of sex differences in coping. Women were more likely than men to engage in most coping strategies. The strongest effects showed that women were more likely to use strategies that involved verbal expressions to others or the self—to seek emotional support, ruminate about problems, and use positive self-talk. These sex differences were consistent across studies, supporting a dispositional level hypothesis. Other sex differences were dependent on the nature of the stressor, supporting role constraint theory. We also examined whether stressor appraisal (i.e., women's tendencies to appraise stressors as more severe) accountedfor sex differences in coping. We found…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.09
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 119
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Stressor
- Coping (psychology)
- Psychology
- Distress
- Clinical psychology
- Developmental psychology
- Social psychology
- Gender equality