A psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese women

The thesis examined psychosocial risks, and positive factors, in relation to depression and spiritual wellbeing in Taiwanese women. It also sought to replicate and extend UK-based attachment models in the Taiwanese context. Poor childhood care, unsupportive and conflictful relationships, negative se...

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Main Author: Chang, Lun Chi
Published: Royal Holloway, University of London 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.591072
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5910722015-03-20T06:10:22ZA psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese womenChang, Lun Chi2013The thesis examined psychosocial risks, and positive factors, in relation to depression and spiritual wellbeing in Taiwanese women. It also sought to replicate and extend UK-based attachment models in the Taiwanese context. Poor childhood care, unsupportive and conflictful relationships, negative self-esteem and insecure attachment style were examined in relation to models of depression. Positive aspects of such factors were examined in relation to spiritual wellbeing. Tests were performed for mediation and moderation effects involving attachment style. Relationships with birth family and family-in-Iaw, as well as religious experience, were examined as additional cultural factors which might add to the explanatory models. Method: The research utilised a cross-sectional quantitative analysis of 721 on-line questionnaires with Taiwanese women aged 18-55 using standardised self -report questionnaires translated into Mandarin. These were supplemented with the Attachment Style Interview on a small subset to explore the social context of experience. Results: Logistic regression confirmed that childhood poor care, thoughts of partner separation, negative self-esteem and attachment insecurity provided the best model for depression outcome in women with a partner. For single women, age under 30 and negative self-esteem alone provided the best model. There was no evidence of mediation effects. Spiritual wellbeing was modelled by having a live-in partner, positive self-esteem, and security of attachment style. limited evidence was presented for moderation effects. Case studies were used to outline the relationship and attachment experience of the Taiwanese women to look at the context of experience and cultural elements. Conclusions: Whilst the basic psychosocial models of depression derived from UK research held, differences revolved around the wider range of family relationships important in Taiwan and important differences emerged in models for women under 30 without a partner which require further research . Attachment style was shown to hold in both risk and resilience models.362.1968527Royal Holloway, University of Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.591072Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 362.1968527
spellingShingle 362.1968527
Chang, Lun Chi
A psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese women
description The thesis examined psychosocial risks, and positive factors, in relation to depression and spiritual wellbeing in Taiwanese women. It also sought to replicate and extend UK-based attachment models in the Taiwanese context. Poor childhood care, unsupportive and conflictful relationships, negative self-esteem and insecure attachment style were examined in relation to models of depression. Positive aspects of such factors were examined in relation to spiritual wellbeing. Tests were performed for mediation and moderation effects involving attachment style. Relationships with birth family and family-in-Iaw, as well as religious experience, were examined as additional cultural factors which might add to the explanatory models. Method: The research utilised a cross-sectional quantitative analysis of 721 on-line questionnaires with Taiwanese women aged 18-55 using standardised self -report questionnaires translated into Mandarin. These were supplemented with the Attachment Style Interview on a small subset to explore the social context of experience. Results: Logistic regression confirmed that childhood poor care, thoughts of partner separation, negative self-esteem and attachment insecurity provided the best model for depression outcome in women with a partner. For single women, age under 30 and negative self-esteem alone provided the best model. There was no evidence of mediation effects. Spiritual wellbeing was modelled by having a live-in partner, positive self-esteem, and security of attachment style. limited evidence was presented for moderation effects. Case studies were used to outline the relationship and attachment experience of the Taiwanese women to look at the context of experience and cultural elements. Conclusions: Whilst the basic psychosocial models of depression derived from UK research held, differences revolved around the wider range of family relationships important in Taiwan and important differences emerged in models for women under 30 without a partner which require further research . Attachment style was shown to hold in both risk and resilience models.
author Chang, Lun Chi
author_facet Chang, Lun Chi
author_sort Chang, Lun Chi
title A psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese women
title_short A psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese women
title_full A psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese women
title_fullStr A psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese women
title_full_unstemmed A psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in Taiwanese women
title_sort psychosocial attachment study of depression and well-being in taiwanese women
publisher Royal Holloway, University of London
publishDate 2013
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.591072
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