Distraction During Deployment: Marital Relationship Associations With Spillover for Deployed Army Soldiers |
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Authors: | Sarah P. Carter Benjamin Loew Elizabeth S. Allen Laura Osborne Scott M. Stanley Howard J. Markman |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, George Mason Universityscarte18@gmu.edu;3. Department of Psychology, University of Denver;4. Department of Psychology, University of Colorado Denver |
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Abstract: | Military spouses often have concerns regarding the impact of their communication on soldiers during deployment. However, literature is mixed regarding how communication between soldiers and spouses may impact soldiers’ self-reported work functioning during deployment, suggesting the need to evaluate moderating factors. In the current study, 3 relationship factors (marital satisfaction, conflictual communication, and proportion of conversation focused on problems) were tested as moderators of communication frequency and negative marriage-to-work spillover for soldiers. Whereas the 3 relationship factors were independently related to negative spillover, none significantly moderated the relationship between communication frequency and spillover. The overall pattern of results suggests that (a) lower marital satisfaction, a focus on problems during communication, and conflictual communication are each strongly linked to spillover for deployed soldiers; and (b) military couples may be self-restricting deployment communication frequency when experiencing less marital satisfaction and higher rates of negative communication. Implications for communication during deployment are discussed. |
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Keywords: | military couples communication spillover deployment |
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