From Deseret News archives:

Study elevates LDS women

They're not a sad and depressed lot, Y. researcher says

Published: Friday, April 2, 2004 5:04 p.m. MST
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A local researcher has good news for LDS women: They are less likely to be depressed than American women in general and show no major differences in overall life satisfaction compared to women nationwide.

But they do score lower on measures of self-esteem.

The findings poke some holes in the long-standing stereotype of LDS women as being more depressed, according to Sherrie Mills Johnson, a sociologist at LDS Church-owned Brigham Young University. Speaking Thursday during the semiannual meeting of the Association of Mormon Counselors and Psychotherapists (AMCAP), Johnson said attempts to tie LDS women's religiosity to increased levels of depression simply don't hold up under research scrutiny.

Johnson's study used two national surveys of LDS women — one of them focusing on 1,519 returned missionaries (RM) and the other on 617 women who had not served missions (NM). She compared those findings to a 1992-94 national study of 3,075 non-LDS women, the National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH), noting that all three studies included similar measures of depression and self-esteem.

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Traditional women's roles involved with marriage and homemaking have long been cited as part of the reason for the purported depression, but national women were three to four times as dissatisfied with their work as LDS women, Johnson's study shows. The study didn't break out specific work categories.

Public religiosity was one measure used to contrast the respondents, and it showed both of the LDS groups scored significantly higher in church attendance than non-LDS women. It was the only religious factor that could be compared among the three groups, since the national study didn't measure private religious practices like prayer, scripture reading, repentance and the influence of inspiration.

In terms of life satisfaction, including place of residence, work, friendship, health, family life and financial situation, there were no statistically significant differences in response, she said, though the largest difference occurred in relation to health. She said that finding may result from the fact that those surveyed are in their child-bearing years (ages 24-44) and LDS women have more children than the national average, along with the accompanying health problems. They also may expect to have better health because Latter-day Saints abstain from tobacco and alcohol, she said, so they rated their health satisfaction lower.

Almost twice as many LDS women answered they were "very happy" compared to others, she said, with three times as many national women reporting they were "unhappy."

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