New research suggests having a helpful husband can lower
stress levels for working mothers. Keeping the faith can
be beneficial, too.
In one new study, women who stopped being religiously
active were far more likely to show signs of anxiety and
alcohol abuse. In separate research reported this week,
women who work and have children were found to have lower
stress if they were happily married.
"At least as far as women are concerned, being
happily married appears to bolster physiological recovery
from work," said UCLA graduate student Darby E. Saxbe,
lead author of the marriage study, detailed in the January
issue of the journal Health Psychology.
Women only
Saxbe's team looked at levels of cortisol in the
working moms. Long-term elevated cortisol levels are associated
with depression, burnout, chronic fatigue syndrome, relationship
problems and possibly even cancer, the researchers say.
Other studies have shown that job
stress fuels disease.
"After a tough day at the office, cortisol levels
dropped further among happily married women than less
happily married ones," Saxbe said.
The researchers examined data on 30 married couples
from Los Angeles. The pattern did not show up in the men.
"This is the first study to show that daily cortisol
patterns are linked to marital satisfaction for women
but not men," said co-author Rena Repetti, a UCLA
professor in the department of psychology.
"They're coming home from a busy day and instead
of having some time to unwind and relax and have a spouse
picking up the load of setting the table, getting dinner
going, signing forms for the kids, these women may have
to immediately to launch back into another stressful routine,"
Repetti said. "Perhaps in happily married couples
the demands of domestic life are being shared more equitably
between men and women, or at least that may be the case
when wives return home from a demanding day at work."
Religion helps
In the other research, scientists studied 278 women
to find how their religious activity had changed over
the years. Those who had stopped being religiously active
"were more than three times more likely to suffer
generalized anxiety and alcohol abuse or dependence compared
with women who reported always having been active,"
the scientists report.
Again, the pattern did not hold up among men.
"Women are simply more integrated into the social
networks of their religious communities," explained
Temple University researcher Joanna Maselko. "When
they stop attending religious services, they lose access
to that network and all its potential benefits. Men may
not be as integrated into the religious community in the
first place and so may not suffer the negative consequences
of leaving."
The study, funded by the National Institute of Mental
Health, is reported in the January issue of the journal
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology.