AI Article Synopsis

  • Elevated psychological distress, such as PTSD and anxiety, is common among veterans and is linked to marital issues.
  • This study focused on how psychological distress affects communication quality in military couples over one year, involving 228 couples with deployed male service members.
  • Results showed that men's psychological distress led to poorer communication quality over time, while women's distress did not impact their communication or that of their partners, highlighting the need for mental health support for service members post-deployment.

Article Abstract

Previous research has found elevated levels of psychological distress (i.e., posttraumatic stress, depressive and anxiety symptoms) among veterans. Existing theory and evidence show how psychological distress is associated with marital disruptions. Only a few studies, however, have tested the link between psychological distress and couple communication quality in military couples, most of which were cross-sectional and employed self-report measures. The current study investigated whether psychological distress predicts changes in observed communication quality across 1 year in 228 couples consisting of male service members, who were deployed to Iraq and/or Afghanistan, and their nondeployed female partners. Psychological distress was indicated by self-reported posttraumatic stress disorder, depressive, and anxiety symptoms. Communication quality was assessed using observed couple interactions. The results of an actor-partner interdependence model showed that men's psychological distress predicted men's lower communication quality at one year after accounting for baseline communication quality. Women's psychological distress did not predict their communication quality, and each partner's psychological distress did not predict changes in their partner's communication quality over time. Consistent with previous findings on civilian populations, our findings highlight the long-term effects of psychological distress among service members on their communication behaviors with their intimate partners, and emphasize the importance of targeting psychological symptoms of service members following deployment to war. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8869849PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/fam0000589DOI Listing

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