Is The Economy Killing Men?
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Although world-wide research over the last 20 years has indicated that women experience depression at twice the rate of men, recent research conducted by Jed Diamond, Ph.D, and others, indicates that male depression has been under-reported and is actually rising dramatically.
In his 2009 book, Male vs. Female Depression: Why Men Act Out and Women Act In Diamond reported on a major research study that concluded “Women seek help—men die.” The study found that 75% of those who sought professional help at a suicide prevention program were female. Conversely 75% of those who committed suicide in the same year were male.
These findings are corroborated by men’s health expert, Will Courtenay, Ph.D. in his forthcoming book, Dying to be Men: Psychosocial, Environmental, and Biobehavioral Directions in Promoting the Health of Men and Boys (April, 2011, Routledge). Courtenay reports the following suicide and death rates (per 100,000 U.S. population) from the National Center for Disease Control, for males and females in various age groups:
Age Group Male Rate Female Rate Male/Female Ratio
15-19 10.9 2.7 4.0
20-24 21.4 4.0 5.4
25-29 19.5 4.7 4.2
65-74 21.5 3.4 6.3
75-84 27.3 3.9 7.0
85 or older 38.6 2.2 17.5
We see that the suicide rate for young men is more than 4 times the rate for young women and the suicide rate for older men is more than 6 to 17 times the rate for women of the same age. Clearly men are at great risk and as populations age throughout the world, more men are likely to give up hope and kill themselves.
Randolph Nesse, M.D. and colleagues at the University of Michigan examined premature deaths among men in 20 countries. They suggest that as many as 375,000 lives could be saved in the U.S. alone if male mortality rates were brought into line with those of women. Being male is now the single largest demographic factor for early death, the study concluded. "If you could make male mortality rates the same as female rates, you would do more good than curing cancer," Nesse says.
As Diamond reports in his recent book, Mr. Mean: Saving Your Relationship from the Irritable Male Syndrome, one of the primary reasons that male depression often goes unrecognized, undiagnosed, and untreated is that most depressed men “act out” their depression by becoming irritable, angry, and withdrawn, while women tend to “act in” their depression and become anxious, sad, and “teary.” Women often act in ways that bring sympathy and support, while men are often viewed as “mean” rather than “depressed.”
In Diamond’s book, The Irritable Male Syndrome: Understanding and Managing the 4 Key Causes of Depression and Aggression, he offers a short summary of the differences he has found between the ways men and women experience depression. These differences, of course, are not true of all men and women, but are tendencies seen in over 40 years of clinical practice.
Women tend to believe their problems could be solved if only they could be a better… (spouse, co-worker, parent, friend). Men tend Believe their problems could be solved if only their… (spouse, co-worker, parent, friend) would treat them better
A recent study reported in the March, 2011 issue of the British journal of Psychiatry, indicates that depression rates in men are likely to increase even more due to the socioeconomic changes going on in the world. The study’s author Boadie Dunlop, M.D., from Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta writes, "Compared to women, many men attach a great importance to their roles as providers and protectors of their families. Failure to fulfill the role of breadwinner is associated with greater depression and marital conflict."
Research shows that since the beginning of the recession in 2007, roughly 75 percent of the jobs lost in the United States were held by men. On the other hand, women are increasingly becoming the primary household earners with 22 percent of wives earning more than their husbands in 2007, versus only 4 percent in 1970. Unfortunately, there is little reason for anyone to believe that traditional male jobs will return in significant numbers even if the economy fully recovers.
"Men in the changing economy will face the same risks for depression that women faced in older economies: trapped in a family role from which they cannot escape because of an inability to find employment," says Dunlop and co-author Tanja Mletzko, research coordinator in the Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program at Emory University. "The changing socioeconomic positions of the West could lead to prevalence in the rates of depression in men increasing, while rates in women decrease," warns Dunlop. "Practitioners need to be aware of these forces of life, and be prepared to explore with their patients the meaning of these changes and interventions that might be helpful."
For more than 40 years Diamond has specialized in men’s health and has developed new and innovative programs to treat male-type depression and other problems that are common in males.
For more information on Dr. Diamond’s work contact:
Jed Diamond, http://MenAlive.com, http://TinyUrl.com/MaleDepression Jed@MenAlive.com, Phone: 707 459-5505.
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