Publication | Closed Access
Power in relationships of women with depression
47
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
Depressed CouplesCouple PsychologyEducationMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesFamily SystemsIntimate RelationshipGender StudiesPersonal RelationshipCouple TherapyFamily RelationshipsPsychiatryDepressionMarital TherapyPsychosocial ResearchPsychosocial IssueInterpersonal RelationshipsDepressed WomenFamily PsychologyMarital Power DifficultiesFamily TherapyRelationship CounselingPsychopathology
To identify marital power difficulties specifically associated with depression, twenty couples in which the female partner was depressed were compared on a range of interpersonal power variables with twenty healthy control couples and also with twenty couples in which the female partner had a disorder other than depression (specifically panic disorder with agoraphobia (PDA)). Couples in the depressed group had two features that distinguished them from couples in both the PDA and control groups and which were independent of relationship dissatisfaction. In the depressed group, both partners reported more physical assault in the year prior to the study and depressed women were more dissatisfied with their control of surplus spending money. Couples in the depressed group had a series of features that distinguished them from couples in both the PDA and control groups but which were due in part to relationship dissatisfaction. Depressed women were less committed to their relationships. Both partners in depressed couples reported more demand–withdraw transactions and less mutual constructive communication within their relationships. Depressed women reported more dissatisfaction with decision‐making and greater dissatisfaction in childcare task distribution.
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