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<title>PSYCHOEDUCATION TRAINING AND INTERPERSONAL THERAPY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS IN MENOPAUSAL RURAL FARMERS IN IBADAN LESS CITY, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1847</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 02:56:01 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T02:56:01Z</dc:date>
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<title>PSYCHOEDUCATION TRAINING AND INTERPERSONAL THERAPY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS IN MENOPAUSAL RURAL FARMERS IN IBADAN LESS CITY, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1848</link>
<description>PSYCHOEDUCATION TRAINING AND INTERPERSONAL THERAPY IN THE MANAGEMENT OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS IN MENOPAUSAL RURAL FARMERS IN IBADAN LESS CITY, NIGERIA
TOKEDE, ABIODUN MORENIKE
Depressive symptoms characterised by a mild and non-clinical mental health disorder, is&#13;
detrimental to the well-being of human beings. Reports have shown that menopausal rural&#13;
farmers in Ibadan less city exhibited bothersome level of depressive symptoms. Previous&#13;
scholarly works on depressive symptoms have centred on their prevalence and causes&#13;
among women, with little attention and interventions, to using Psychoeducation Training&#13;
(PET) and Interpersonal Therapy (IPT). This study, therefore, was designed to determine&#13;
the effect of PET and IPT in the management of depressive symptoms among menopausal&#13;
rural farmers in Ibadan less city. The moderating effects of self-esteem and life events&#13;
were also examined.&#13;
The study was anchored to Integrated Helplessness/Hopelessness Theory, while the pretest&#13;
posttest control group quasi experimental design with a 3x2x2 factorial matrix was&#13;
adopted. The multistage sampling procedure was adopted. Three local government areas&#13;
(Ido, Akinyele and Ona-ara) in Ibadan, from the existing six, were randomly selected.&#13;
Three rural areas (Ajobo, Alabata and Butubutu) were purposively selected based on the&#13;
prevalence of menopausal depressive symptoms. The instruments used were a selfdeveloped Life events scale (α = .71), Rosenberg Self-Esteem (α = .71) and Beck&#13;
Depression (α = .95) inventories. Participants who scored 10-20 on Fann Patient Health&#13;
Questionnaire-9 Depression Screening tool were selected. The participants were randomly&#13;
assigned to PET (17), IPT (16) and control (15) groups. The intervention lasted 10 weeks.&#13;
Data were analysed using Analysis of covariance and Scheffe posthoc test at 0.05 level of&#13;
significance.&#13;
The participants‘ age was 48.3 ± 3.56 years, and 45% were married. There was a&#13;
significant main effect of treatment in the management of depressive symptoms in&#13;
menopausal rural farmers (F (2; 45) = 92.66, partial η2 = 0.98). The participants in IPT had&#13;
the lowest mean score on depressive symptoms (9.63) followed by those in PET (16.88),&#13;
and those in the control (34.27) groups. Self-esteem had a significant main effect on in&#13;
depressive symptoms (F (2; 45) = 5.69, partial η2 = 0.28). Participants with high self-esteem&#13;
(16.50) benefited more than did their counterparts with low self-esteem (22.59). There was&#13;
no significant main effect of life events in the management of depressive symptoms. There&#13;
was significant interaction effect of treatment and self-esteem on depressive symptoms (F&#13;
(2; 45) = 6.70, partial η2 = 0.47). The two-way interaction effects of treatment and life events&#13;
and self-esteem and life events were not significant. The three-way interaction effect was&#13;
not significant&#13;
Psychoeducation training and Interpersonal therapy were effective in managing&#13;
depressive symptoms, but Interpersonal therapy was more effective in managing&#13;
depressive symptoms among menopausal rural farmers in Ibadan less city. Developmental,&#13;
counselling and clinical psychologists should adopt these interventions for managing&#13;
depressive symptoms among menopausal rural farmers.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Feb 2022 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1848</guid>
<dc:date>2022-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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