Results 231 to 240 of about 221,887 (285)
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Predicting Lifestyle and Marital Intimacy on the Tendency to Marital Infidelity in Women

Psychology of Woman Journal, 2020
This research was conducted to predict the tendency to marital infidelity in women: with the predictive role of lifestyles and marital intimacy. The current study was descriptive and correlational, and the statistical population of the research was women
Z. Moradi, marjan malaki, farhad namjo
semanticscholar   +1 more source

THE MEASUREMENT OF MARITAL INTIMACY

Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 1984
The Waring Intimacy Questionnaire (WIQ), is a 90‐item, true/false questionnaire specifically developed to measure the quantity and quality of marital intimacy. Eight facets of marital intimacy are measured: affection, cohesion, conflict resolution, compatibility, expressiveness, sexuality, autonomy and identity.
openaire   +1 more source

Intimacy and marital depression: Interactional partners

International Journal of Family Therapy, 1983
The relationship between marital depression and lack of intimacy in a caring relationship is presented and supported with evidence from teh relevant literature. A case example is given to illustrate the therapeutic implications of this viewpoint.
Edgar Jessee, Luciano L'Abate
openaire   +1 more source

Parenting attitudes and marital intimacy: A longitudinal analysis.

Journal of Family Psychology, 2002
This longitudinal study examined change in 97 couples' marital intimacy over the first 3 years after the birth of a child. Participants included both first-time and experienced parents. Regardless of parity, both wives and husbands, on average, showed linear declines in marital intimacy; however, significant variability in individual trajectories was ...
Marion, O'Brien, Vicki, Peyton
openaire   +2 more sources

Type A personality and marital intimacy in amputees

British Journal of Medical Psychology, 1993
The specific characteristics of the Type A personality have generated a great deal of recent attention due to the prevalence of these characteristics in persons suffering from coronary heart disease. Type A individuals are more likely to be involved in serious accidents and experience more secondary complications when faced with serious illness.
M, Monforton, E, Helmes, A B, Deathe
openaire   +2 more sources

Self-disclosure and its relationship to marital intimacy

Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1984
Examined the relationship between marital intimacy and self-disclosure from a multidimensional framework within a sample of 10 clinical and 10 nonclinical married couples. The linear combination of various parameters of self-disclosing behavior was able to account for 71.7% (R = .853) of the variance in intimacy ratings derived from a structured ...
G J, Chelune   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Marital Conflict over Intimacy

2018
It is in marriage and sexual love that most Americans expect to find their major attachment to an adult. The very word "relationship" has come to mean a sexual, couple relationship. But expectations for marital intimacy are often frustrated, in part because of our system of gender roles.
openaire   +1 more source

Marital rehabilitation after prostate cancer – a matter of intimacy

International Journal of Urological Nursing, 2015
ABSTRACTProstate cancer is the most frequent male cancer disease in the western world. Sexual dysfunction is common after prostate cancer with radiation therapy and androgen deprivation therapy, but further research is needed to determine the lived experience of couples struggling with sexual dysfunction after treatment.
Dieperink, Karin Brochstedt   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Marital Intimacy Among Older Persons

Journal of Family Issues, 1988
This article reports on a study of the choice of confidant among a sample of married persons aged 55 and over. Although 85% of the women and 70% of the men reported having a confidant, less than 30% of the women and 40% of the men reported confiding in their spouses.
openaire   +1 more source

Marital intimacy, psychosomatic symptoms, and cognitive therapy

Psychosomatics, 1980
Abstract The marriages of patients with psychosomatic illness involving chronic physical symptoms of obscure etiology–are often superficially adjusted, but have a significant lack of interpersonal intimacy. Furthermore, the physical symptoms of one partner may be used as an indirect attempt to overcome a frustrating lack of communication.
openaire   +2 more sources

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