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Postpartum partner support, demand-withdraw communication, and maternal stress

Postpartum partner support, demand-withdraw communication, and maternal stress
Postpartum partner support, demand-withdraw communication, and maternal stress
The weeks following the birth of a child can be stressful for new mothers. Maternal stress may be increased when mothers are dissatisfied with instrumental partner support (e.g., division of childcare duties and family decision-making power). The purpose of the current study was to determine if there is an association between dissatisfaction with partner support and maternal stress in the postpartum period, and to examine whether that association is mediated by demand-withdraw communication between partners. Participants were 49 women who completed questionnaires about satisfaction with partner support, female demand/male withdraw communication in their relationship, and their own perceived stress approximately 8 weeks after giving birth. Findings support the hypothesis that demand-withdraw communication mediates the association between dissatisfaction with partner support and maternal stress. This finding suggests that fathers' withdrawal in the context of mothers' requests for discussion or change appears to be associated with increased levels of maternal stress.

0361-6843
362-369
Thorp, Steven R.
2a875502-7e22-4c64-b344-a5f91c9f04aa
Krause, Elizabeth D.
db6d7dbe-6a0d-4eb1-97f5-bfb184d5cdfc
Cukrowicz, Kelly C.
79313a63-7dc9-4d58-ae80-5c153d200520
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20
Thorp, Steven R.
2a875502-7e22-4c64-b344-a5f91c9f04aa
Krause, Elizabeth D.
db6d7dbe-6a0d-4eb1-97f5-bfb184d5cdfc
Cukrowicz, Kelly C.
79313a63-7dc9-4d58-ae80-5c153d200520
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20

Thorp, Steven R., Krause, Elizabeth D., Cukrowicz, Kelly C. and Lynch, Thomas R. (2004) Postpartum partner support, demand-withdraw communication, and maternal stress. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 28 (4), 362-369. (doi:10.1111/j.1471-6402.2004.00153.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The weeks following the birth of a child can be stressful for new mothers. Maternal stress may be increased when mothers are dissatisfied with instrumental partner support (e.g., division of childcare duties and family decision-making power). The purpose of the current study was to determine if there is an association between dissatisfaction with partner support and maternal stress in the postpartum period, and to examine whether that association is mediated by demand-withdraw communication between partners. Participants were 49 women who completed questionnaires about satisfaction with partner support, female demand/male withdraw communication in their relationship, and their own perceived stress approximately 8 weeks after giving birth. Findings support the hypothesis that demand-withdraw communication mediates the association between dissatisfaction with partner support and maternal stress. This finding suggests that fathers' withdrawal in the context of mothers' requests for discussion or change appears to be associated with increased levels of maternal stress.

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Published date: December 2004

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 194345
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/194345
ISSN: 0361-6843
PURE UUID: 7115590c-5e94-488d-a145-ed31edbd3811
ORCID for Thomas R. Lynch: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1270-6097

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Date deposited: 27 Jul 2011 10:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:32

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Contributors

Author: Steven R. Thorp
Author: Elizabeth D. Krause
Author: Kelly C. Cukrowicz
Author: Thomas R. Lynch ORCID iD

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