Cornelius Talea, Desrosiers Alethea, Kershaw Trace
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, 06269, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, 06519, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2016 Sep;165:46-55. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.07.030. Epub 2016 Jul 26.
Romantic relationships provide a context in which partners can influence each other's health behaviors (e.g., weight-related behaviors, substance use). Partner influence may be especially pronounced among newly parenting adolescent and young adult couples because of the desire to maintain relationships (and therefore openness to influence), and because parenting-related challenges can pose risk for uptake of unhealthy behaviors. Two understudied factors that might affect partner influence on health behaviors include relative power within the relationship and prior levels of engagement in health behaviors.
The current study explored longitudinal partner influence effects in a sample of newly parenting adolescent and young adult females and their male partners (Ncouples = 157) recruited from four obstetrics/gynecology clinics in Connecticut between July 2007 and February 2011. Five health behaviors in two domains were explored: weight-related behaviors (unhealthy eating, exercise) and substance use (cigarette, alcohol, and marijuana use). Relationship power and previous levels of health behaviors were examined as moderators. Variations across gender were also examined.
Results of dyadic analysis showed partner influences for alcohol use. Partner influence depended on relationship power for eating, alcohol, and marijuana use, and on previous behavior for cigarette use. Results also varied by gender - only female-to-male influence was found for unhealthy eating and cigarette use. Higher relationship power was protective against smoking escalation for females.
These results differ from previous research findings mainly on male-to-female influences. Such asymmetries may reflect traditional female dominance in food preparation, as well as shifts in power balances postpartum. Targeting relational power dynamics may buffer the spread and escalation of unhealthy behaviors in young parents, with implications for the health of both members of a couple as well as their children.
浪漫关系提供了一种环境,在此环境中伴侣能够相互影响彼此的健康行为(例如,与体重相关的行为、物质使用)。伴侣影响在初为父母的青少年和年轻成年情侣中可能尤为显著,这是因为他们渴望维持关系(因此愿意接受影响),而且与育儿相关的挑战可能会带来采取不健康行为的风险。两个尚未得到充分研究的可能影响伴侣对健康行为影响的因素包括关系中的相对权力以及先前参与健康行为的程度。
本研究在2007年7月至2011年2月期间从康涅狄格州的四家妇产科诊所招募的初为父母的青少年和年轻成年女性及其男性伴侣样本(N对夫妻 = 157)中探索了纵向伴侣影响效应。研究了两个领域的五种健康行为:与体重相关的行为(不健康饮食、锻炼)和物质使用(吸烟、饮酒和吸食大麻)。将关系权力和先前的健康行为水平作为调节因素进行了考察。还考察了性别差异。
二元分析结果显示了伴侣对饮酒行为的影响。伴侣影响在饮食、饮酒和吸食大麻方面取决于关系权力,在吸烟方面取决于先前的行为。结果也因性别而异——仅发现了女性对男性在不健康饮食和吸烟方面的影响。较高的关系权力对女性吸烟行为的升级有保护作用。
这些结果与先前的研究结果主要在男性对女性影响方面有所不同。这种不对称可能反映了传统上女性在食物准备方面的主导地位,以及产后权力平衡的变化。针对关系权力动态可能会缓冲年轻父母中不健康行为的传播和升级,这对夫妻双方及其子女的健康都有影响。