Social support and perceived partner responsiveness have complex associations with salivary cortisol in married couples

H. Fivecoat, Richard E. Mattson, Nicole Cameron, Matthew D. Johnson
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Abstract

Spousal support may help ameliorate the health consequences of stressful situations by downregulating cortisol. To examine how cortisol levels change in conjunction with spousal social support during discussions of a stressful situation, 191 married couples engaged in two 10-minute interactions addressing a personal (i.e., non-marital) problem. We coded for positive and negative social support provision and receipt, assessed the perception of received support, and collected salivary cortisol samples. We found that wives’ display of more negative behaviors while receiving support was associated with an increase in wives’ cortisol levels via an indirect (mediated) effect of perceived partner responsiveness. Overall, results suggest a link between support behaviors, changes in cortisol and perceived partner responsiveness, with more consistent links between support behaviors and responsiveness ratings relative to other paths, and cortisol effects found more often in wives than husbands. Exploratory analyses also suggest that cortisol levels coming into an interaction may impact elements of support interactions. The implications of the role of cortisol and partner responsiveness to the provision of spousal support are discussed.
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已婚夫妇的社会支持和感知到的伴侣响应度与唾液皮质醇之间存在复杂的联系
配偶的支持可能有助于通过下调皮质醇来减轻压力状况对健康造成的影响。为了研究在讨论压力情况时皮质醇水平如何随配偶的社会支持而变化,191 对已婚夫妇进行了两次 10 分钟的互动,以解决个人(即非婚姻)问题。我们对提供和接受的积极和消极社会支持进行了编码,评估了对所接受支持的感知,并收集了唾液皮质醇样本。我们发现,妻子在接受支持时表现出的更多消极行为与妻子皮质醇水平的升高有关,这是通过感知到的伴侣响应性的间接(中介)效应产生的。总体而言,研究结果表明,支持行为、皮质醇的变化和感知到的伴侣响应度之间存在联系,相对于其他途径,支持行为和响应度评级之间的联系更为一致,而且皮质醇效应在妻子身上比在丈夫身上更常见。探索性分析还表明,皮质醇水平可能会影响互动中的支持因素。本文讨论了皮质醇和伴侣响应性对提供配偶支持的影响。
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