COVID-19期间夫妻的家庭责任分工,对公平的看法和关系功能。

IF 1.9 Q2 FAMILY STUDIES
Yana Ryjova, A. Gold, Zaharah Zaidi, Hannah F. Rasmussen, Yehsong Kim, G. Margolin
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引用次数: 1

摘要

由于夫妻适应了大流行造成的日常生活中断(如学校关闭、在家工作)带来的压力,许多夫妻经历了既有有偿劳动和家务劳动分工的变化。本研究调查了家庭责任贡献和劳动分工公平感是否与夫妻关系满意度和分歧有关。性别、家庭子女人数和大流行期间的经济压力被列为调节因素。美国的479名参与者(52.8%为女性,年龄19-72岁,年龄34.54岁)完成了一项在线调查,这是一项关于应对COVID-19的夫妇的更大研究的一部分。线性混合模型显示,与男性相比,女性报告承担了更多的家庭责任,基于孩子的存在和数量的性别差距越来越大,并且报告的公平性更低。对于女性来说,责任和关系分歧之间的关联随着经济压力的增加而增加。公平与积极的关系结果有关;然而,孩子的数量在不同的方向上调节了这种联系的强度。经济压力也增加了公平和关系功能之间的联系。研究结果强调了夫妻如何处理日常家庭责任的重要性,尤其是他们对公平的看法如何影响关系的结果。这些发现在多大程度上可以推广到大流行之外的更普遍的家庭生活中,仍有待确定,但结果表明,责任和公平的分工,特别是在压力和动荡时期,被认为是重要的和保护性的关系要素。(心理信息数据库记录(c) 2022 APA,所有权利保留)影响声明在COVID-19大流行大约一年后,人们认为家庭责任分配的公平性对夫妻关系的运作具有保护作用,特别是对女性、有孩子的夫妇和经历经济压力的夫妇。虽然还不清楚这些结果是否适用于其他时期,但对夫妻和家庭治疗师以及夫妻自己来说,努力实现公平的责任分工可能是一个有意义的目标。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2022 APA,版权所有)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Couples’ division of household responsibilities during COVID-19, perceptions of fairness, and relationship functioning.
As couples adapted to the stressful, pandemic-induced disruptions to daily life (e.g., closures of schools, working from home), many couples experienced changes to established divisions of paid and household labor. The present study investigates whether contributions to household responsibilities and perceptions of fairness in divisions of labor are associated with couple relationship satisfaction and disagreements. Gender, number of children in a family, and financial stress during the pandemic are included as moderators. Four hundred seventy-nine participants (52.8% women;ages 19-72, Mage = 34.54) in the United States completed an online survey as part of a larger study on couples coping with COVID-19. Linear mixed models showed that women, compared to men, reported doing more household responsibilities, with a widening gender gap based on the presence and number of children, and reported lower fairness. For women, the association between responsibilities and relationship disagreements increased with greater financial stress. Fairness was related to positive relationship outcomes;however, number of children moderated the strength of this association in different directions for women and men. Financial stress also increased the association between fairness and relationship functioning. Results underscore the importance of how couples manage their everyday household responsibilities and, especially, how their perceptions of fairness affect relationship outcomes. The extent to which these findings generalize beyond the pandemic to family life more generally remains to be determined, but the results suggest that the division of responsibilities and fairness, particularly during times of stress and upheaval, are putatively important and protective relationship elements. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved) Impact Statement Approximately 1 year into the COVID-19 pandemic, perceived fairness in the division of household responsibilities had a protective role for couple relationship functioning, particularly for women, couples with children, and couples experiencing financial stress. Although it is yet unknown whether these results extend to other time periods, working toward a division of responsibilities perceived as fair can be a meaningful goal for couple and family therapists, and for couples themselves. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.90%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Couple and Family Psychology: Research and Practice ® (CFP) is a scholarly journal publishing peer-reviewed papers representing the science and practice of family psychology. CFP is the official publication of APA Division 43 (Society for Couple and Family Psychology) and is intended to be a forum for scholarly dialogue regarding the most important emerging issues in the field, a primary outlet for research particularly as it impacts practice and for papers regarding education, public policy, and the identity of the profession of family psychology. As the official journal for the Society, CFP will provide a home for the members of the division and those in other fields interested in the most cutting edge issues in family psychology. Unlike other journals in the field, CFP is focused specifically on family psychology as a specialty practice, unique scientific domain, and critical element of psychological knowledge. CFP will seek and publish scholarly manuscripts that make a contribution to the knowledge base of family psychology specifically, and the science and practice of working with individuals, couples and families from a family systems perspective in general.
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