Marital stress may make people more vulnerable to depression, according to a recent study by Center for Healthy Minds researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and their colleagues.
The long-term study, published in the April 2014 issue of the journal Psychophysiology, shows that people who experience chronic marital stress are less able to savor positive experiences, a hallmark of depression. They are also more likely to report other depressive symptoms.
The findings are important, says study leader Richard Davidson, UW–Madison William James and Vilas Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry, because they could help researchers understand what makes some people more vulnerable to mental and emotional health challenges.
They might also help scientists develop tools to prevent them.
“This is not an obvious consequence, if you will, of marital stress, but it’s one I think is extraordinarily important because of the cascade of changes that may be associated,” says Davidson, founder of the Center for Healthy Minds. “This is the signature of an emotional style that reveals vulnerability to depression.”
The researchers thought chronic marital stress could provide a good model for how other common daily stressors may lead to depression and similar conditions.
“How is it that a stressor gets under your skin and how does that make some more vulnerable to maladaptive responses?” says UW–Madison graduate student Regina Lapate. She is the paper’s lead author.
For the longitudinal study – part of the National Institute on Aging-funded Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study directed by Carol Ryff, director of the Institute on Aging at UW-Madison – researchers recruited married adult participants to complete questionnaires rating their stress on a six-point scale.
They were asked questions like how often they felt let down by their partner or how frequently their spouse criticized them. They were also evaluated for depression.
Roughly nine years later, the questionnaire and depression assessments were repeated.