Artigo Publicado em Periódico
Social inequality and depressive disorders in Bahia,Brazil: interactions of gender,ethnicity,and social class
Fecha
2004Autor
Almeida Filho, Naomar Monteiro de
Lessa, Ines
Magalhães, Lucélia
Araújo, Maria Jenny
Aquino, Estela Maria Motta Lima Leão de
James, Sherman A.
Kawachi, Ichiro
Almeida Filho, Naomar Monteiro de
Lessa, Ines
Magalhães, Lucélia
Araújo, Maria Jenny
Aquino, Estela Maria Motta Lima Leão de
James, Sherman A.
Kawachi, Ichiro
Institución
Resumen
We conducted a study of the association between gender,race/ethnicity,and social class and prevalence of depressive
disorders in an urban sample (N ¼ 2302) in Bahia,Brazil. Individual mental health status was assessed by the PSAD/
QMPA scale. Family SES and head of household’s schooling and occupation were taken as components for a 4-level
social class scale. Race/ethnicity (white, moreno,mulatto, black) was assessed with a combination of self-designation
and a system of racial classification. The overall 12-month prevalence of depressive symptoms was 12%,with a
female:male ratio of 2:1. Divorced/widowed persons showed the highest prevalence and single the lowest. There was a
negative correlation with education: the ratio college educated:illiterate was 4:1. This gradient was stronger for women
than men. There was no F:M difference in depression among Whites,upper-middle classes,college-educated, or
illiterate. Prevalence ratios for single,widowed and Blacks were well above the overall pattern. Regarding race/
ethnicity,higher prevalences of depression were concentrated in the Moreno and Mulatto subgroups. There was a
consistent social class and gender interaction,along all race/ethnicity strata. Three-way interaction analyses found
strong gender effect for poor and working-class groups,for all race/ethnicity strata but Whites. Black poor yielded the
strongest gender effect of all (up to nine-fold). We conclude that even in a highly unequal context such as Bahia,Blacks,
Mulattos and women were protected from depression by placement into the local dominant classes; and that the social
meaning of ethnic-gender-generation diversity varies with being unemployed or underemployed,poor or miserable,
urban or rural,migrant or non-migrant.
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