Conceptual, Methodological, and Theoretical Problems in Studying Social Support as a Buffer Against Life Stress

1982 Journal of Health and Social Behavior 1,495 citations

Abstract

The buffering hypothesis suggests that social support can moderate the impacts of life events upon mental health. However, several problems have yet to be resolved in this literature. Social support has been inadequately conceptualized and operationalized; therefore, the specific dimensions of support that reduce event impacts cannot be identified. The direct effect of events upon support and the interactive (buffering) effect of events with support have been confounded in many studies, such that results may have been biased in favor of the hypothesis. The relationships between events, support, and psychological disturbance have not been clarified theoretically; thus, the possibility that support itself is an etiologicalfactor has been overlooked. This article reviews empirical work on the buffering hypothesis, outlines alternate conceptualizations and operationalizations of support, presents a refined hypothesis and model for analysis, and suggests three theoretical approaches that may be used to explain the interrelationships between support, events, and disturbance.

Keywords

PsychologyStress (linguistics)Buffer (optical fiber)Social supportSociologySocial psychologyComputer sciencePhilosophy

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Publication Info

Year
1982
Type
article
Volume
23
Issue
2
Pages
145-145
Citations
1495
Access
Closed

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Peggy A. Thoits (1982). Conceptual, Methodological, and Theoretical Problems in Studying Social Support as a Buffer Against Life Stress. Journal of Health and Social Behavior , 23 (2) , 145-145. https://doi.org/10.2307/2136511

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2136511