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Marital adjustment in families of young children with disabilities: Associations with daily hassles and problem-focused coping

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 03:13 authored by Susana Gavidia-PayneSusana Gavidia-Payne, Zolinda Stoneman
A family systems framework was used to examine associations between stressors/hassles, problem-focused coping, and marital adjustment in 67 families of young children with disabilities. Most of the couples were experiencing average to above average marital adjustment. When daily stress ors/hassles were higher, husbands and wives viewed their marriages more negatively. After variance contributed by stress ors/hassles was statistically controlled, fathers who employed more problem-focused coping strategies were more positive about their marriages. For wives (but not husbands), a cross-spousal partner effect was found; women reported higher marital adjustment when their husbands employed more problem-focused coping strategies. We reaffirmed the systemic nature of family processes and highlighted the role of parent gender in understanding the relationships among stressors, coping, and marital well-being.

History

Journal

American Journal on Mental Retardation

Volume

111

Issue

1

Start page

1

End page

14

Total pages

14

Publisher

American Association on Mental Retardation

Place published

Washington, DC

Language

English

Copyright

© Copyright by American Association on Mental Retardation 2006

Former Identifier

2006000943

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-09-01

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