articleAmerican Journal of PsychiatryMar 31, 2004Closed access

The Interrelationship of Neuroticism, Sex, and Stressful Life Events in the Prediction of Episodes of Major Depression

Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

Three potent risk factors for major depression are female sex, the personality trait of neuroticism, and adversity resulting from exposure to stressful life events. Little is known about how they interrelate in the etiology of depressive illness. METHOD: In over 7,500 individual twins from a population-based sample, the authors used a Cox proportional hazard model to predict onsets of episodes of DSM-III-R major depression in the year before the latest interviews on the basis of previously assessed neuroticism, sex, and adversity during the past year; adversity was operationalized as the long-term contextual threat scored from 15 life event categories.

Results

In the best-fit Cox model for prediction of depressive onsets, neuroticism, female sex, and greater adversity all strongly increased risk for major depression. An interaction was seen between neuroticism and adversity such that individuals with high neuroticism were at greater overall risk for major depression and were more sensitive to the depressogenic effects of adversity. An interaction was also seen between adversity and sex, as the excess risk for major depression in women was confined to individuals with low stress exposure.

Citation impact

812
total citations
FWCI
40.89
Percentile
100%
References
37
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Neuroticism
  • Psychology
  • Depression (economics)
  • Personality
  • Psychosocial
  • Population
  • Clinical psychology
  • Big Five personality traits
No related works found for this paper.