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Category > Psychology Posted 17 Nov 2017 My Price 10.00

PSYC-3006-1,Psychology of Gender.

PSYC-3006-1,Psychology of Gender.

 

Learning Resources


Please read and view (where applicable) the following Learning Resources before you complete this week's assignments.


Reading

  • Course Text: Gender: Psychological Perspectives
    • Chapter 14, "Stress, Coping, and Psychopathology" (pp. 364–396)
    • Chapter 13, "Health and Fitness" (pp. 332–363)

Web Sites

  • Stress
    http://www.apa.org/topics/stress/index.aspx
  • Definitions of Populations
    http://www.cdc.gov/omhd/Populations/definitions.htmNote: Scroll down to the "Gender" heading to explore specific health issues for each gender.

Optional Resources

  • Web site: The American Institute of Stress
    http://www.stress.org

discussion week 5

Gender, Stress, and Mental Health

 

Whether you are male or female, you no doubt face some level of stress in your life. Even good things that happen, such as marriage, a job promotion, a move to a new home, or birth of a baby, can be stressful. People deal with stress in different ways. Some handle life stressors in positive and healthy ways, while others allow stressors to impact their health. The damaging effects of stress have been shown to be a potential factor in cardiovascular disease, cancer, hypertension, and numerous other issues. In addition, there are many stress-related mental health problems, such as depression, suicide, anxiety, and substance abuse that can be in part related to stress and the ability to deal effectively with stress.

 

Life's stressors can be very different for men and women. Men experience different stresses in life and often deal with stress differently than women do. For example, men and women have different roles and expectations from others placed on them. Men and women experience violence, both as children and as adults, at different rates. which has been shown to be a significant factor in serious mental health problems and ongoing stress. Men and women experience discrimination differently, which adds to stress, especially in the work place. Women tend to be in poverty more often than men, which is a significant factor in stress, depression, and anxiety. These are only a few examples where research suggests that the stress for men and women is different.

 

Other factors contribute to stress and resulting health problems and can be different for men and women. For example, women typically develop stronger support systems than men do as adults, which has been show to improve the ability to deal with stress. Men may perceive themselves as having more power over those things that cause them stress than women do. Power often impacts how one copes with stress. And though men and women often have families as their support system, women tend to take on the role of the family caretaker, which can be a significant stressor. It may also be that men and women react to stressful situations differently, either because of personal traits or because of how they have been socialized. Some research suggests that women tend to respond to stress with more emotion, while men may respond to stress with more problem-solving behaviors.

 

To prepare for this Discussion:

 

•Review Chapter 14 in the course text,Gender: Psychological Perspectives. Focus on the gender-related similarities and differences, and similarities related to stress, coping, and the related mental health problems.

 

•Think about specific stressful life situations, such as divorce, marriage, entering a new school, job changes or loss, dealing with sick family members or aging parents, the death of someone close, having a baby, etc. Consider some of the stressors specific to these situations.

 

•Select one stressful situation to focus on in this Discussion (e.g., divorce, marriage, a job change or loss, a sick family member or aging parent, a death in the family, etc.).

 

•Explore the topic of stress on the American Psychological Association Web site. Focus on stress issues related to the life situation you selected.

 

•Now think about how stressors may be different for men and women in general and specific to the situation you chose. How might men and women deal with the stressors differently? Why might there be differences?

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Status NEW Posted 17 Nov 2017 01:11 PM My Price 10.00

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