Publication | Closed Access
Gender Differences in Coping with Stress: When Stressor and Appraisals Do Not Differ
501
Citations
49
References
1994
Year
Gendered PerceptionEvent TypeEducationSocial SupportSocial SciencesPsychologyGender IdentityStressGender StudiesSex DifferencesStress ManagementCoping BehaviorPsychiatryGendered ContextGender DifferencesSexual BehaviorSocial StressPsychosocial ResearchPsychosocial IssueAppraisals DoPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
In an attempt to control for the effects of event type on sex differences in coping, men and women responded to an identical achievement-related stressor under controlled laboratory conditions. Although men and women were similar in their cognitive appraisal of the situation, they nonetheless reported differences in preparatory coping. Women reported seeking social support and using emotion-focused coping to a greater extent than men, whereas men reported using relatively more problem-focused coping than women. The masculinity and femininity of respondents failed to moderate the relation between sex and coping. These results are inconsistent with a purely situational explanation of sex differences in coping but are consistent with the notion that men and women are socialized to cope with stress in different ways.
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