Authors
Rhonda N Balzarini, Amy Muise, Giulia Zoppolat, Alyssa Di Bartolomeo, David L Rodrigues, María Alonso-Ferres, Betul Urganci, Anik Debrot, Nipat Bock Pichayayothin, Christoffer Dharma, Peilian Chi, Johan C Karremans, Dominik Schoebi, Richard B Slatcher
Publication date
2023/4
Journal
Social psychological and personality science
Volume
14
Issue
3
Pages
342-355
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
External stressors can erode relationship quality, though little is known about what can mitigate these effects. We examined whether COVID-related stressors were associated with lower relationship quality, and whether perceived partner responsiveness—the extent to which people believe their partner understands, validates, and cares for them—buffers these effects. When people in relationships reported more COVID-related stressors they reported poorer relationship quality at the onset of the pandemic (N = 3,593 from 57 countries) and over the subsequent 3 months (N = 1,125). At the onset of the pandemic, most associations were buffered by perceived partner responsiveness, such that people who perceived their partners to be low in responsiveness reported poorer relationship quality when they experienced COVID-related stressors, but these associations were reduced among people who perceived their …
Total citations
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Scholar articles