Sex differences in the prevalence and presentation of mental illnesses are well documented. Women are more likely to experience common mental health disorders (e.g., anxiety and depression), and when they experience these conditions, they often present differently to men (e.g., women are more likely to report somatic complaints). Periods of physical and hormonal change (e.g., adolescence, pregnancy, and menopause) are particular risk periods for the development of mental illness in women. In this article, we advance the proposal that interoception (the perception of the body’s internal state) is one mechanism that might explain sex differences in vulnerability to mental illness. We argue that known sex differences in interoception, whereby ...
In this review, we describe the sex differences in prevalence, onset, symptom profiles, and disease ...
Sex differences are prominent in mood and anxiety disorders and may provide a window into mechanisms...
Sex differences in neurodevelopmental and common mental disorders are a ubiquitous, well-known, thou...
Sex differences in the prevalence and presentation of mental illnesses are well documented. Women ar...
Sex differences in the prevalence and presentation of mental illnesses are welldocumented. Women are...
Research provides evidence of a distinctive gendered landscape of mental illness, with women and men...
When mental illness is precisely defined as a functional disorder involv-ing acute distress or disor...
This chapter summarizes the most significant gender influences on mental health in terms of illness ...
Mental health is not gender neutral. There is incontrovertible evidence that gender differences exis...
This paper examines sex differences in psychiatric morbidity, using data from a community sample. Th...
Men and women tend to manifest distinct mental health outcomes. Specifically, women report higher le...
Mental illness is associated with a significant burden of morbidity and disability. Lifetime prevale...
Objective: To examine how women differ from men in their expression and experience of psychosis. Met...
This article reviews the literature on normal brain development and behavioural development in men a...
In this review, we describe the sex differences in prevalence, onset, symptom profiles, and disease ...
In this review, we describe the sex differences in prevalence, onset, symptom profiles, and disease ...
Sex differences are prominent in mood and anxiety disorders and may provide a window into mechanisms...
Sex differences in neurodevelopmental and common mental disorders are a ubiquitous, well-known, thou...
Sex differences in the prevalence and presentation of mental illnesses are well documented. Women ar...
Sex differences in the prevalence and presentation of mental illnesses are welldocumented. Women are...
Research provides evidence of a distinctive gendered landscape of mental illness, with women and men...
When mental illness is precisely defined as a functional disorder involv-ing acute distress or disor...
This chapter summarizes the most significant gender influences on mental health in terms of illness ...
Mental health is not gender neutral. There is incontrovertible evidence that gender differences exis...
This paper examines sex differences in psychiatric morbidity, using data from a community sample. Th...
Men and women tend to manifest distinct mental health outcomes. Specifically, women report higher le...
Mental illness is associated with a significant burden of morbidity and disability. Lifetime prevale...
Objective: To examine how women differ from men in their expression and experience of psychosis. Met...
This article reviews the literature on normal brain development and behavioural development in men a...
In this review, we describe the sex differences in prevalence, onset, symptom profiles, and disease ...
In this review, we describe the sex differences in prevalence, onset, symptom profiles, and disease ...
Sex differences are prominent in mood and anxiety disorders and may provide a window into mechanisms...
Sex differences in neurodevelopmental and common mental disorders are a ubiquitous, well-known, thou...