Confiding in crisis: Gender differences in pattern of confiding among cancer patients
Judy Harrison,
Peter Maguire and
Carolyn Pitceathly
Social Science & Medicine, 1995, vol. 41, issue 9, 1255-1260
Abstract:
Social support has been identified as a key predictor of psychological morbidity following adverse life-events. However, the majority of the research has focused exclusively on women, despite evidence of significant gender difference in the utilisation and role of social support. To examine gender differences in patterns of confiding crisis, 520 subjects were interviewed within 8 weeks of a cancer diagnosis. Men were as likely as women to have confided their main concern in others (61% mainly or fully confided vs 67% of women, P = 0.308) but were much more likely to have used only one confidante (45% vs 25% of women, P
Date: 1995
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