2023
DOI: 10.1111/jftr.12523
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How sociocultural contexts may shape the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on couples' relationships

Abstract: The COVID‐19 pandemic continues to affect couples worldwide who vary in sociocultural values, norms, and expectations, but most work examining connections between pandemic‐related stress and couples' relationships has been conducted in the US or similar Western cultures. Guided by the vulnerability‐stress‐adaptation (VSA) model (Karney & Bradbury, 1995), we present a revised theoretical framework for evaluating how sociocultural contexts may moderate the ways in which pandemic‐related stress risks poor cou… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
(121 reference statements)
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“…Ambiguous loss, which has been useful in studying specific phenomena, is now relevant for an overarching understanding of the current global experience of loss amid uncertainty. In this special issue, three papers selected the COVID-pandemic as the main adversity (Ceberio, 2024;Medina Centeno, 2024;Pietromonaco & Overall, 2024), a fourth paper chose the war in Ukraine (Vetere & Shimwell, 2024), and a fifth paper examined the wildfires and climate change (Ferreira et al, 2024). Two papers did not focus on a specific type of adversity; however, one examined ways in which families could guard relational security when faced with adversities threatening attachment relationships (Ber astegui & Pitillas, 2024).…”
Section: Global Adversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Ambiguous loss, which has been useful in studying specific phenomena, is now relevant for an overarching understanding of the current global experience of loss amid uncertainty. In this special issue, three papers selected the COVID-pandemic as the main adversity (Ceberio, 2024;Medina Centeno, 2024;Pietromonaco & Overall, 2024), a fourth paper chose the war in Ukraine (Vetere & Shimwell, 2024), and a fifth paper examined the wildfires and climate change (Ferreira et al, 2024). Two papers did not focus on a specific type of adversity; however, one examined ways in which families could guard relational security when faced with adversities threatening attachment relationships (Ber astegui & Pitillas, 2024).…”
Section: Global Adversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Across studies, the impact of adversity was described at the different systemic levels: communities, whole-families, couples, and parent-children and individuals. Four papers included overviews of selected studies showing how the pandemic impacted families and communities (Ceberio, 2024;Medina Centeno, 2024) and couples (Pietromonaco & Overall, 2024), and how wildfires affected families and communities (Ferreira et al, 2024). Two articles focused on the experience of security, with authors using the attachment framework.…”
Section: Global Adversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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