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Showing 1 to 15 of 42 results Save | Export
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Hartley, Sigan L.; DaWalt, Leann Smith; Schultz, Haley M. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2017
We examined daily couple experiences in 174 couples who had a child with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) relative to 179 couples who had a child without disabilities and their same-day association with parent affect. Parents completed a 14-day daily diary in which they reported time with partner, partner support, partner closeness, and positive and…
Descriptors: Spouses, Interpersonal Relationship, Children, Autism
Shannon M. Canfield – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Untreated perinatal mood and anxiety disorders have short- and long-term consequences for mental, physical, developmental, social, and economic outcomes affecting the mother, infant, family, and community. Online Health interventions are known to be effective in treating mental health disorders and increasing access to care. Successful perinatal…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Perinatal Influences, Social Support Groups, Pregnancy
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Bounds, Christina; Jenkins, Lyndsay N. – Contemporary School Psychology, 2016
Teacher-directed violence, or violence found in a school setting that involves teacher victimization (Espelage et al. in "The American Psychologist," 68(2), 75-87, 2011), is a relatively new area of study in education. Teacher-directed violence or teacher victimization includes obscene gestures/remarks, harassment, verbal threats, and…
Descriptors: Violence, Teacher Student Relationship, Educational Policy, Policy Formation
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Porter, Laura S.; Baucom, Donald H.; Keefe, Francis J.; Patterson, Emily S. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2012
Partner-assisted emotional disclosure is a couple-based intervention designed to help patients disclose cancer-related concerns to their spouses-partners. We previously found that, compared with an education/support control condition, partner-assisted emotional disclosure led to significant improvements in relationship quality and intimacy for…
Descriptors: Intervention, Cancer, Intimacy, Patients
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Tsibidaki, Assimina – Electronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology, 2013
Introduction: The target of the study is to examine important aspects of the marital relationship: marital satisfaction, spouse's representation of the marital relationship, roles and boundaries in families raising a child with a severe disability. Also, this study compares families with a child with a severe disability to those with children…
Descriptors: Marital Satisfaction, Foreign Countries, Spouses, Severe Disabilities
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Rini, Christine; Redd, William H.; Austin, Jane; Mosher, Catherine E.; Meschian, Yeraz Markarian; Isola, Luis; Scigliano, Eileen; Moskowitz, Craig H.; Papadopoulos, Esperanza; Labay, Larissa E.; Rowley, Scott; Burkhalter, Jack E.; Schetter, Christine Dunkel; DuHamel, Katherine N. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2011
Objective: Hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) survivors who are 1 to 3 years posttransplant are challenged by the need to resume valued social roles and activities--a task that may be complicated by enduring transplant-related psychological distress common in this patient population. The present study investigated whether transplant…
Descriptors: Social Support Groups, Emotional Disturbances, Cytology, Surgery
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Baucom, Katherine J. W.; Sevier, Mia; Eldridge, Kathleen A.; Doss, Brian D.; Christensen, Andrew – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2011
Objective: To examine changes in observed communication after therapy termination in distressed couples from a randomized clinical trial. Method: A total of 134 distressed couples were randomly assigned to either traditional behavioral couple therapy (TBCT; Jacobson & Margolin, 1979) or integrative behavioral couple therapy (IBCT; Jacobson &…
Descriptors: Evidence, Marital Status, Problem Solving, Marriage Counseling
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Lacey, Krim K.; Saunders, Daniel G.; Zhang, Lingling – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2011
This study compares women of color and non-Hispanic White women regarding the influence of socioeconomic status, family investment, and psychological abuse on leaving a violent relationship. It was found that most women who left stayed away for less than a month. Women of color and non-Hispanic White women did not differ in their length or rate of…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Females, Whites, Family Violence
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Gilad, Dvorit; Lavee, Yoav – Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin, 2010
This article describes the cognitive schemata of couples' support relationships among 65 couples in which the husband had a long-term spinal cord injury and 65 couples without disability. The structure of the support relations schemata were examined by means of smallest-space analysis. Similarities between men and women in couples with and without…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Injuries, Gender Differences, Males
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Suzuki, Sawako; Holloway, Susan D.; Yamamoto, Yoko; Mindnich, Jessica D. – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
To understand the conditions that give rise to parenting self-efficacy in Japan and the United States, the authors have investigated its relation to the perceptions of support available to mothers of children in the final year of preschool (N = 235; n = 121 in United States, n = 114 in Japan). Hierarchical regression analysis indicates that in…
Descriptors: Mothers, Self Efficacy, Child Rearing, Foreign Countries
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Ferro, Christine; Cermele, Jill; Saltzman, Ann – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2008
The current study extends previous research on marital rape and acceptance of general rape myths by comparing the perceptions of undergraduate college students (n = 85) to those of college alumni/ae (n = 44) who graduated from the same university three decades earlier. Participants read a hypothetical rape scenario that depicted the perpetrator as…
Descriptors: Rape, Misconceptions, Alumni, Marriage
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Ro, Hye-Sun; Wampler, Richard S. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2009
Marriage and family therapy (MFT) faculty and graduate students rated the "typical" or predictable behaviors of husbands or wives coming for therapy using the Georgia Marriage Q-sort. Scores were compared with previously published scores for both "ideal" couples (i.e., showing positive behaviors, attitudes, and problem-solving skills) and a sample…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Spouses, Marriage, Family Counseling
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Wienke, Chris; Hill, Gretchen J. – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
Prior research indicates that the married enjoy higher levels of well-being than the unmarried, including unmarried cohabiters. Yet, comparisons of married and unmarried persons routinely exclude partnered gays and lesbians. Using a large probability sample, this study assessed how the well-being of partnered gays and lesbians (282) compares with…
Descriptors: Well Being, Correlation, Marriage, Spouses
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Kulik, Liat; Klein, Dana – Journal of Community Psychology, 2010
The present study compared Muslim-Arab women in Israel who initiated divorce (n=45) with those who stayed in stressful marital relationships (n=46). Based on an ecological approach and using a cross-sectional design, we explored the differences between the two groups with regard to the following variables: personal resources (education, paid…
Descriptors: Divorce, Spouses, Muslims, Marital Status
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Dew, Jeffrey – Social Forces, 2009
Qualitative and quantitative research has suggested that married couples handle the increasing demands of intensive parenting norms and work expectations by reducing spousal time (e.g., the time that spouses spend alone with each other). Using nationally representative time-diary data, this study examined whether married individuals with children…
Descriptors: Marital Satisfaction, Child Rearing, Time, Spouses
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