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Alcohol use and relationship quality among South African couples

Alcohol use and relationship quality among South African couples
Alcohol use and relationship quality among South African couples
Objective: The HIV literature has largely ignored the importance of alcohol use in the quality of intimate relationships in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), despite evidence of alcohol’s role in relational behaviors that increase risk for HIV infection and other harms. The present study explored the association of alcohol use with relationship functioning among heterosexual couples from rural South Africa. Method: Dyadic analyses were conducted with 443 sexually active, heterosexual, South African couples (886 individuals) to examine the association between male partners’ alcohol use (abstinent, nonhazardous, and hazardous), and male and female partners’ reports of relationship intimacy, trust, mutually constructive communication, demand/withdraw communication, and satisfaction. Five structural equation models were fit using male partner alcohol use as a predictor of male and female reports of relationship quality. Results: Women with a hazardous-drinking male partner (compared to an abstainer) reported significantly higher levels of intimacy (p <.05) and significantly more demand/withdraw communication (p <.001); men who were hazardous drinkers reported significantly less trust in their relationship compared to men who were abstainers (p < .01). Conclusions: Hazardous alcohol use among South African couples is positively correlated with women’s relationship intimacy and maladaptive communication patterns, yet negatively correlated with men’s perceived trust.
1082-6084
1-10
Woolf-King, Sarah E.
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Conroy, A.A.
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Fritz, K.
04fb526b-2470-40f8-b626-047b9990611c
Johnson, M.O.
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Hosegood, Victoria
c59a89d5-5edc-42dd-b282-f44458fd2993
Van Rooyen, H.
199b19fa-11f5-4dc3-b079-2613f93ec5cc
Darbes, L.
62e528c5-39d0-43f5-8c1a-f71df3d63933
Mcgrath, Nuala
b75c0232-24ec-443f-93a9-69e9e12dc961
Woolf-King, Sarah E.
667c6027-32b7-4b15-b70b-a02e12a5c930
Conroy, A.A.
ddd625c0-b60d-44af-bac6-a4c8df2a7236
Fritz, K.
04fb526b-2470-40f8-b626-047b9990611c
Johnson, M.O.
d1888b33-9803-4add-9ae7-b6b38d9c0c33
Hosegood, Victoria
c59a89d5-5edc-42dd-b282-f44458fd2993
Van Rooyen, H.
199b19fa-11f5-4dc3-b079-2613f93ec5cc
Darbes, L.
62e528c5-39d0-43f5-8c1a-f71df3d63933
Mcgrath, Nuala
b75c0232-24ec-443f-93a9-69e9e12dc961

Woolf-King, Sarah E., Conroy, A.A., Fritz, K., Johnson, M.O., Hosegood, Victoria, Van Rooyen, H., Darbes, L. and Mcgrath, Nuala (2018) Alcohol use and relationship quality among South African couples. Substance Use & Misuse, 54 (4), 1-10. (doi:10.1080/10826084.2018.1531428).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: The HIV literature has largely ignored the importance of alcohol use in the quality of intimate relationships in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), despite evidence of alcohol’s role in relational behaviors that increase risk for HIV infection and other harms. The present study explored the association of alcohol use with relationship functioning among heterosexual couples from rural South Africa. Method: Dyadic analyses were conducted with 443 sexually active, heterosexual, South African couples (886 individuals) to examine the association between male partners’ alcohol use (abstinent, nonhazardous, and hazardous), and male and female partners’ reports of relationship intimacy, trust, mutually constructive communication, demand/withdraw communication, and satisfaction. Five structural equation models were fit using male partner alcohol use as a predictor of male and female reports of relationship quality. Results: Women with a hazardous-drinking male partner (compared to an abstainer) reported significantly higher levels of intimacy (p <.05) and significantly more demand/withdraw communication (p <.001); men who were hazardous drinkers reported significantly less trust in their relationship compared to men who were abstainers (p < .01). Conclusions: Hazardous alcohol use among South African couples is positively correlated with women’s relationship intimacy and maladaptive communication patterns, yet negatively correlated with men’s perceived trust.

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Woolf-King et al Alc Rel Qual South Afr Manuscript R1 06.13.18 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 September 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 November 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 426816
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/426816
ISSN: 1082-6084
PURE UUID: 89806fca-a974-40d8-9bb1-1cc5f104e234
ORCID for Victoria Hosegood: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2244-2518
ORCID for Nuala Mcgrath: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1039-0159

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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2018 17:32
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:17

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Contributors

Author: Sarah E. Woolf-King
Author: A.A. Conroy
Author: K. Fritz
Author: M.O. Johnson
Author: H. Van Rooyen
Author: L. Darbes
Author: Nuala Mcgrath ORCID iD

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