Manne S L, Zautra A J
Arizona State University.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 1989 Apr;56(4):608-17. doi: 10.1037//0022-3514.56.4.608.
Examined whether psychological adjustment of women with rheumatoid arthritis would be related to the support and criticism the patient received from the husband. Interviews were conducted with the husbands of 103 women with rheumatoid arthritis. Spouse interviews were content coded for critical remarks. Wives completed a revised version of the Ways of Coping Scale and a scale of the perceived supportiveness of the spouse. Husbands completed rating scales assessing their perceived vulnerability to illness and the degree of burden they experienced in providing assistance to their wives. Path analyses revealed that patient adjustment was significantly related to the attitude of the spouse. Patients with a highly critical spouse engaged in more maladaptive coping behaviors and reported a poorer psychological adjustment. Independent of spousal criticism, patients who perceived their spouse as being supportive engaged in more adaptive coping. A path model was fit to the data that suggested that the spouse may affect adjustment indirectly through influencing the patient's selection of adaptive or maladaptive coping responses.
研究类风湿性关节炎女性的心理调适是否与患者从丈夫那里得到的支持和批评有关。对103名类风湿性关节炎女性的丈夫进行了访谈。对配偶访谈内容进行编码以统计批评性言论。妻子们完成了修订版的应对方式量表和配偶支持感量表。丈夫们完成了评估他们对疾病易感性以及在帮助妻子时所经历负担程度的评定量表。路径分析表明,患者的调适与配偶的态度显著相关。配偶批评性强的患者会采取更多适应不良的应对行为,心理调适也较差。与配偶批评无关,认为配偶支持自己的患者会采取更多适应性应对方式。一个路径模型与数据拟合,表明配偶可能通过影响患者对适应性或适应不良应对反应的选择来间接影响调适。