Two Key Studies of Prevalence Rates (DP IB Psychology)
Revision Note
Written by: Claire Neeson
Reviewed by: Lucy Vinson
Key study one (prevalence rates of MDD): Abdoli et al. (2022)
Aim: To investigate the global prevalence of MDD in the elderly.
Participants:
A total sample of 18,953 participants was derived from 20 studies used in this meta-analysis
The participants constituted a cross-cultural sample with studies taken from countries and cultures worldwide
Procedure:
A meta-analysis of the aforesaid 20 studies accessed via a database of journals
The researchers conducted a systematic search for studies which had investigated MDD in elderly populations up to March 2021
Results:
There is an MDD global prevalence rate of 13.3% in the elderly
The prevalence rate for elderly women was 11.9%; for men it was 9.7% which is not statistically significant
The highest prevalence rates of MDD in the elderly were seen in Australia (20.1%) followed by Europe (12.9%)
Conclusion:
MDD has high prevalence rates globally amongst the elderly so this finding should be used to implement social support as an intervention to mitigate the negative impact of MDD on older people’s mental health
Gender may be an issue in reporting or being diagnosed with MDD but it is not as significant so no stereotype-based assumptions should be made when suggesting treatment and therapies for MDD in the elderly
Evaluation of Abdoli et al. (2022)
Strengths
The use of a large sample and statistical analysis means that the results of this study could be said to be robust and reliable
With a growing global population of older people this is useful research as it will become increasingly necessary to address the needs of older people, including their mental health
Weaknesses
The research is able to pinpoint prevalence rates of MDD but it cannot explain why some elderly people experience depressive symptoms which means that it lacks some explanatory power
Prevalence rates can only provide information based on recorded statistics: there are doubtless many more people globally who experience MDD but who either don’t recognise it as such, don’t report it or don’t admit to themselves that they are depressed
Social support may be enough to prevent MDD in the elderly.
Key study two (prevalence rates of phobias): Frederikson et al. (1996)
Aim: To investigate prevalence rates of a range of specific phobias including claustrophobia, arachnophobia, astraphobia
Participants:
704 adults from Sweden obtain via random sampling
The participants were aged 18-70 years old
Procedure:
The participants completed a series of questionnaires and self-reports designed to determine the extent of their phobias and extreme fears
Visual analogue scales were used so that participants could express their level of fear and anxiety to phobic stimuli such as lightning, enclosed spaces, darkness, flying, heights, spiders, mutilation, injections and the dentist
Below is a type of visual analogue scale:
Results:
Participant responses were categorised into three classifications: animal phobias, blood-injection-injury phobias and natural environment and situational phobias
The total prevalence for phobia across the group as a whole was 19.9% (26.5% for women, 12.4% for men)
5.4% of the women in the sample reported multiple phobias compared to 1.5% of the men
Women reported more snake and spider phobias
Fear of mutilation showed no gender difference
Fear of flying and fear of inanimate objects but decreased fear of injections were reported by older female participants but not by older male participants
The younger participants reported more fears surrounding animals
The older women in the sample feared flying more than the younger women but feared injections less.
Conclusion: Prevalence rates of specific phobias may show differences based on gender and age.
Evaluation of Frederikson et al. (1996)
Strengths
The use of the visual analogue scale to measure the emotional response of participants to specific phobia has some validity to it as it is a more authentic representation of fear/anxiety than that offered by a numerical scale
Understanding that differences in the prevalence of specific phobias may depend on gender and age could be useful to therapists and counsellors
Weaknesses:
The visual analogue scale is open to interpretation: not everyone will have exactly the same understanding of each level of fear/anxiety which means that it lacks reliability as the measure is not likely to be consistent
Although the age range of the sample is wide it only drew its participants from Sweden which means that the findings are not generalisable to people from other countries
Examiner Tip
Rating scales are often used in psychological research to determine the level of agreement with a specific statement or question. Don’t forget to include rigorous analysis of this type of scale in your exam responses, particularly when answering a generic question on research methods.
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