产后关系灾难化与性福之间的日常和纵向联系

Grace A. Wang, Samantha J. Dawson, J. Huberman, Natalie O. Rosen
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摘要

新为人父母的夫妇会面临更多的关系冲突和挑战;恋爱伴侣如何调节自己的情绪以应对这些挑战,会对他们的性关系产生重要影响。人们可能会通过关系灾难化来应对这些情感挑战,关系灾难化指的是放大负面认知,反思关系问题,并采取一种无助的取向来应对这些问题。关系灾难化可能会将新手父母的注意力引向他们关系中的挑战,比如性方面的困难,从而对性健康产生负面影响。本研究探讨了人际关系灾难化与自己和伴侣的性幸福感之间的关系。分娩父母及其伴侣在产后 3 个月和 9 个月完成了一项新的关系灾难化测量和性幸福感测量(184 对夫妇),并在产后 3 个月和 4 个月之间的 21 天内完成了这些测量的简短版本(229 对夫妇)。在分娩父母采用更多关系灾难化的日子里,他们也报告了更多的性困扰,伴侣双方都报告了较低的性满意度和性欲。伴侣的日常关系灾难化与他们自身较低的性满意度和性欲以及伴侣双方较高的性困扰有关。然而,纵向分析只提供了极少的证据表明,当考虑到产后时期特有的其他压力因素(如抑郁症状、压力、疲劳)时,关系灾难化的代价会随着时间的推移而持续。研究结果表明,人际关系灾难化有可能成为心理教育和干预措施的新目标,以促进初为父母者的日常性幸福。
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Daily and longitudinal associations between relationship catastrophizing and sexual well-being in the postpartum period
New parent couples report heightened relationship conflicts and challenges; how romantic partners regulate their emotions in response can have key implications for their sexual relationship. One way people might respond to these emotional challenges is through relationship catastrophizing, which refers to magnifying negative cognitions, ruminating on relationship problems, and adopting a helpless orientation toward coping with these problems. Relationship catastrophizing may orient new parents’ attention toward challenges in their relationship, such as sexual difficulties, with negative implications for sexual well-being. The current study examined how relationship catastrophizing relates to one’s own and a partner’s sexual well-being. Birthing parents and their partners completed a novel measure of relationship catastrophizing and measures of sexual well-being at 3 and 9 months postpartum ( n = 184 couples) and brief versions of these measures for 21 days between 3 and 4 months postpartum ( n = 229 couples). On days when birthing parents employed greater relationship catastrophizing, they also reported greater sexual distress and both partners reported lower sexual satisfaction and desire. Partners’ daily relationship catastrophizing was associated with their own lower sexual satisfaction and desire, and both partners’ greater sexual distress. Longitudinal analyses, however, provided minimal evidence that the costs of relationship catastrophizing persist over time when accounting for other stressors (e.g., depressive symptoms, stress, fatigue) characteristic of the postpartum period. Findings support the potential for relationship catastrophizing as a novel target for psychoeducation and interventions aimed at promoting the day-to-day sexual well-being of new parents.
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