4.5 Article

Psychological Distress Transmission in Same-sex and Different-sex Marriages

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 18-35

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0022146518813097

Keywords

bisexual; emotion work; gay; gender; intimacy; lesbian; LGBT; marriage; mental health; psychological distress; transgender

Funding

  1. National Institute on Aging [R21AG044585]
  2. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [P2CHD042849, T32 HD007081]

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Ample work stresses the interdependence of spouses' psychological distress and that women are more influenced by their spouse's distress than men. Yet previous studies have focused primarily on heterosexual couples, raising questions about whether and how this gendered pattern might unfold for men and women in same-sex marriages. We analyze 10 days of diary data from a purposive sample of men and women in same-sex and different-sex marriages (n = 756 individuals from 378 couples) to examine psychological distress transmission between spouses and how this process may differ for men and women in same-sex and different-sex marriages. We find that women are more strongly influenced by their partners' distress than men, regardless of whether they are married to a man or a woman, and that this relationship is particularly strong for women with male spouses.

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