Male Depression and Therapy
A special issue of Behavioral Sciences (ISSN 2076-328X). This special issue belongs to the section "Psychiatric, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2024) | Viewed by 27669
Special Issue Editor
Interests: depressive disorders; men; masculinity; traditional male role norms; gender role conflict; male specific psychotherapy; male specific pharmacotherapy; pathophysiology of depressive disorders; testosterone; steroid hormones; molecular and cellular psychiatry; healthy aging
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
It is my great pleasure to invite you to contribute an article to the Special Issue on male depression and therapy. This Special Issue will feature original research papers, communications, and review articles. The journal Behavioral Sciences has no restrictions on the length of manuscripts, provided that the text is concise and comprehensive.
Being born male or female is one of the most distinguishing characteristics in our society and shapes how a human being is perceived, interacted with, and expected to behave. Manhood, however, has been identified as a precarious state requiring continual social proof and validation. This leads to the fact that men express psychological distress in a dissimilar way and are reluctant to seek help. The distinct biology of men compared to women, with stress physiological systems showing higher responses to psychosocial stress in men, is an additional factor that warrants consideration.
A growing field of research is concerned with the identification of differing phenotypes of depressive syndromes and disorders in men. Although for men only half the prevalence rate for depressive disorders as compared to women is observed, a two-fold higher prevalence rate of alcohol use disorders and an up to four-fold increased rate for completed suicide in men are reported. A history of depression is considered to be one of the main risk factors for both alcohol use disorders and completed suicide. Also of interest is the finding that men with a high adherence to traditional male role norms are twice as likely to die by suicide as men with a low adherence to traditional male role norms. Therefore, more and more researchers are advocating the perspective that there might exist male-typical phenotypes of depression not captured by current diagnostic criteria, suggesting a male depression related to adherence to traditional male role norms and characterized by externalizing symptomatology.
This Special Issue is therefore dedicated to men's mental health. It aims to further elucidate male-specific phenotypes of mental disorders, their relationship with gender role socialization and adherence to traditional male role norms, and the experience of gender role conflict. This involves also the aspect of help-seeking and communicating psychological distress. Likewise, contributions to the pathophysiology of depressive and associated disorders with a focus on sex differences and the unique characteristics of male patients are of interest. With regard to the advancement of personalized medicine, male-specific or male-adjusted psychotherapeutic or pharmacological therapy approaches for mental disorders will be covered.
Dr. Andreas Walther
Guest Editor
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Male Depression
- Depressive Disorders
- Suicide
- Alcohol Use Disorders
- Substance Use Disorders
- Men
- Boys
- Masculinity
- Help Seeking
- Traditional Male Role Norms
- Male Gender Role Conflict
- Precarious Manhood
- Male Specific Psychotherapy
- Male Specific Pharmacotherapy
- Sex Differences in the Pathophysiology of Depressive Disorders
- Testosterone
- Cortisol
- Steroid Hormones
- Stress Physiology
- Neuroimaging
- EEG
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