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1.
Reviews the book, Existential/dialectical marital therapy: Breaking the secret code of marriage by Israel W. Charny (see record 1992-97923-000). This book was written to further our understanding of the "psychological chemistry" which makes the experience of marriage a lasting and enriching process. Most marriages, Charny suggests, follow an all-too-well-known path of growing disappointment, emptiness, and resentment. Charny travels the highways and byways of the marital landscape with a sense of wonder and curiosity on the one hand, and a passion for justice, truth, and bringing forth the best in marriages on the other hand. The result is a treatise that is bold, readable, scholarly, down-to-earth, and professionally relevant, yet suffused with warmth and caring. The author succeeds in providing an appreciation of marriage that is inspirational and creative as well as instructive, and which permeates virtually every discussion, even those dealing with clinical aspects of the treatment process. Anyone practicing marital and family therapy will find something of considerable value in this book. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

2.
Reviews the book, Narcissism and intimacy: Love and marriage in an age of confusion by Marion F. Solomon (see record 1988-98781-000). This book presents a rather unique blend of theoretical explorations and clinical case material which provides the reader with an extremely valuable look at issues facing the survival of marital relationships in our present culture. Beginning with a sociological perspective of how our culture has come to value autonomy and self-fulfillment, the author then identifies a series of "narcissistic myths" and goes on to explore how these myths impact on realistic perspectives of marriage and intimate relationships. The reviewer believes that this book has a wealth of readable theoretical material along with clinical case examples which bring the theoretical perspectives alive and translate them into tools for effective treatment. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

3.
Reviews the book, Enhancing marital intimacy through facilitating cognitive self-disclosure by Edward M. Waring (see record 1988-97051-000). In this book Dr. Waring presents his approach to marital therapy, which he calls cognitive family therapy. The central thesis of the book is as follows: A lack of intimacy in family relationships is associated with emotional and psychosomatic symptoms. An important determinant of intimacy, perhaps the most important, is self-disclosure. The author suggests that facilitating self-disclosure is the easiest and most direct technique for enhancing intimacy. The emphasis on cognitive, as opposed to emotional, self-disclosure is the crucial and innovative aspect of the author's approach to treatment. After completing this book, one is left with one idea that there may be some couples with psychiatric problems who benefit more from the exchange of information about each other than from the expression of personal emotions. This is an interesting notion, and one hopes that the author will publish more definitive conceptual and empirical work on this idea. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

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Reviews the book, Social learning and systems approaches to marriage and the family by R. Dev. Peters and R. J. McMahon (see record 1988-97132-000). The volume aims specifically to address a variety of issues and to highlight areas where an integration of social learning and systems models seems to be occurring. In terms of variety, the editors have succeeded in their goal, with chapters on most of the key issues in the family field such as maternal depression, spouse abuse, divorce, sexual dysfunction, marital conflict and helping families deal with handicapped children. Most of the contributors are able to discuss theory and research pertaining to a particular family problem in an integrated and informative way and to relate these aspects to clinical intervention. This book is essentially a well written, easy to read volume which addresses a variety of family processes and problems and integrates theory, research and clinical practice. This broad scope should ensure that it will appeal to a wide audience in the helping professions. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

6.
Recent research suggests that marital quality predicts the survival of patients with heart failure (HF), and it is hypothesized that a communal orientation to coping marked by first-person plural pronoun use (we talk) may be a factor in this. During a home interview, 57 HF patients (46 men and 16 women) and their spouses discussed how they coped with the patients' health problems. Analysis of pronoun counts from both partners revealed that we talk by the spouse, but not the patient, independently predicted positive change in the patient's HF symptoms and general health over the next 6 months and did so better than direct self-report measures of marital quality and the communal coping construct. We talk by the patient and spouse did not correlate, however, and gender had no apparent moderating effects on how pronoun use predicted health change. The results highlight the utility of automatic text analysis in couple-interaction research and provide further evidence that looking beyond the patient can improve prediction of health outcomes. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

7.
Reviews the book, Continuity & change in marriage & the family edited by Jean E. Veevers (1991). Dr. Veevers perceived a need for "competent empirical works specifically applicable to the task of describing and understanding Canadian family life." She has filled that need with Continuity & Change in Marriage & the Family, a collection of readings. The book is intended for students in sociology of marriage and family classes as a supplement to textbooks with a theoretical emphasis. Continuity & Change in Marriage & the Family offers the insights of Canadian (and other) scholars about, as Dr. Veevers states, "issues that are directly relevant to the study of marriage and the family in Canada." Because the articles illuminate the condition of families in all post-modern societies, the book has relevance outside Canada. The message of the book is that change, both social and familial, and the acceptance of a variety of family arrangements, has resulted in families that are created by those who live in them. Thus, students should know how to be creative in building and maintaining their personal relationships. It provides students with ideas to consider as they develop as family members. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

8.
Reviews the book, Handbook of measurements for marriage & family therapy by N. Fredman and R. Sherman (1987). This book has provided a service for the field by collecting in one source the measurement instruments published since 1975. However, a major drawback is that the method for selecting measurements for inclusion in the handbook is not stated. While the handbook is intended as a source for practitioners, researchers, and trainees, it is most useful to researchers, graduate students, and others interested in surveying the current state of the science. Clearly, the study of marriage and family therapy remains in its infancy. Collectively, the measures presented possess serious sampling, reliability, and/or validity limitations. Systematic research building on the base of the strongest instruments, rather than increasing the proliferation of new instruments with sampling, reliability, and validity limitations, is an important direction for the field to pursue. The handbook, despite its own limitations, does provide a valuable first step for the serious student and researcher. It is a recommended addition to the library of every graduate program offering training in marriage and family therapy and would be a particularly useful reading in introductory marital and family therapy courses. As for clinicians, the handbook offers nothing to replace a good clinical interview. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

9.
Reviews the book, Social Networks and Social Support edited by Benjamin H. Gottlieb (1981). For this volume, Gottlieb has brought together contributors from various disciplines thus providing a variety of perspectives. The main goal is to summarize current knowledge about the health-enhancing potential of social networks so as to improve the design of programmes of preventive intervention. Gottlieb has provided a necessary and useful integration and assessment of the topic with cautious optimism and objectivity in a well-edited book. This book is organized into three parts. Part I is on social support and life stress and focuses on the consequences of support in coping with stressful events, in the adjustment of pregnant adolescents, marital disruptions and serious illness. Part II explores the utility and practical application of network analysis. Part III probes the prospects for creating a mutually benficial partnership between lay and professional helping resources in the human services. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

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Pathological personality is strongly linked with interpersonal impairment, yet no study to date has examined the relationship between concurrent personality pathology and dysfunction in marriage--a relationship that most people find central to their lives. In a cross-sectional study of a community sample of married couples (N = 82), the authors used multilevel modeling to estimate the association of self- and spouse-reported symptoms of personality disorder (PD) with levels of marital satisfaction and verbal aggression and perpetration of physical violence. Inclusion of self- and spouse report of total PD symptoms resulted in improved model fit and greater variance explained, with much of the improvement coming after the addition of spouse report. The incremental validity of spouse report for several of the 10 PD scales was supported for marital satisfaction and verbal aggression, particularly for the Borderline and Dependent PD scales. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

12.
This study compared patterns of self-disclosure in psychotherapy and marriage. Participants (48 married, current psychotherapy patients, mean age = 42) completed a 101-item Disclosure to Therapist Inventory and a companion measure, a 101-item Disclosure to Spouse Inventory. Results indicated a pattern of greater disclosure to one's therapist in regard to issues involving despair (e.g., feelings of depression), and to one's spouse in regard to procreation and body concerns (e.g., birth control) and values (e.g., feelings about religion, race, or politics). Issues involving sex were infrequently discussed in either context. Discrepancy scores (differences between extent of disclosure and perceived importance) were greater in the spouse condition. Outcome predictors varied by situation, with overall disclosure predicting therapeutic outcome and both overall disclosure and discrepancy scores predicting marital satisfaction. Findings suggest that although there is substantial overlap in issues discussed in these two contexts, certain intimate disclosures are perceived as situation-specific. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

13.
Relationship self-regulation (SR) is how much partners work at their couple relationship, and it has been hypothesized to predict relationship satisfaction. To test this hypothesis, the authors assessed 191 newlywed couples on SR and relationship satisfaction annually for 5 years. They conducted a multilevel analysis predicting satisfaction with SR as a time-varying covariate. The intercept and slope of relationship satisfaction varied across participants, and the slope showed an average slight decline for both men and women. There was mixed support for the primary hypothesis. SR cross-sectionally and prospectively predicted the intercept, but it did not predict the slope, of relationship satisfaction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

14.
Measures of communication, hostility, and neuroticism taken from 85 couples from Germany before marriage were used to predict marital outcomes 5 years later. Hostility and neuroticism discriminated between couples who separated or divorced after 5 years and those who remained married, whereas communication discriminated between married-satisfied and married- dissatisfied couples. Only hostility and neuroticism predicted marital satisfaction at 18 months, suggesting that these factors contribute to rapid, early declines in marital functioning. The authors conclude that poor communication alone cannot account for the full range of marital outcomes and that skill-based models of marriage can be strengthened by considering relatively rare exchanges between partners (e.g., aggression) and their enduring vulnerabilities (e.g., neuroticism). (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

15.
Does forgiveness predict later conflict resolution in married couples? Twelve-month follow-up data on conflict resolution were collected from the couples studied by F. D. Fincham, S. R. Beach, and J. Davila (see record 2004-11293-007), who had provided earlier reports of forgiveness and conflict resolution. For wives, the positive dimension of forgiveness or benevolence predicted husbands' later reports of better conflict resolution controlling for initial levels of conflict resolution. This finding was independent of wives' marital satisfaction and the degree of hurt engendered by husbands' transgressions. For husbands, the only predictor of wives' reports of later conflict resolution was initial level of conflict resolution. The findings are discussed in terms of the direction of effect between forgiveness and conflict resolution and of the mechanisms that might link them. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

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Numerous studies have examined the communication behaviors of Western, primarily North American, couples and have demonstrated a robust and reliable association between marital satisfaction and couple communication. However, there has been relatively less attention given to the generalizability of these findings to non-Western couples. To address this issue, the authors conducted an observational study of marital communication among couples from 3 different cultural groups: 50 White American couples, 52 Pakistani couples in Pakistan, and 48 immigrant Pakistani couples in America. The results show that positive and negative communication behaviors were associated with marital satisfaction within each of the 3 cultural groups. However, the American group's marital satisfaction was more strongly related to marital communication behaviors than was that of the Pakistani group and, to a lesser extent, the immigrant group. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

18.
Reviews the books, Madhouse: A Tragic Tale of Megalomania and Modern Medicine by Andrew Scull (see record 2005-06776-000); and The Lobotomist: A Maverick Medical Genius and His Tragic Quest to Rid the World of Mental Illness by Jack El-Hai (see record 2005-02343-000). In both books, the history of experimental clinical psychiatry is laid bare with devastating accounts of the efforts to conquer mental illness by any means necessary. Both books are fascinating reading and may illuminate our current context in which the biological avenues for treating mental disorders continue to traffic in hopes of a one-size-fits-all cure, while psychoanalysis ambivalently struggles with how to conduct rigorous research to demonstrate the efficacy of our treatment. Andrew Scull's book Madhouse offers a well-documented historical account of a bizarre episode in American psychiatric history. The centerpiece of Scull's investigative work is Henry Cotton, MD, the superintendent of the Trenton State Hospital in Trenton, New Jersey, from 1907-1930. Once Cotton arrived at Trenton, he was appalled by the conditions he found and instituted reforms such as eliminating the culture of violence by attendants, removing over 700 pieces of restraining equipment from the hospital, and introducing occupational therapy. Jack El-Hai gives us the next segment of psychiatric surgery in his book The Lobotomist, a biography of the neurologist, turned surgical outlaw, Walter Freeman, MD. Walter Freeman was a neurologist fascinated with science and experimentation. Settling into work at St. Elizabeth's hospital in Washington, DC, in 1924, Freeman eventually joined the faculty of George Washington University where he remained until 1954. At that time neurosyphilis was the scourge of mental hospitals producing thousands of victims who were totally disabled by the neurological sequellae of tertiary illness. Thus lobotomy became an efficient outpatient procedure that could be applied to a larger patient population. Both of these books are important reading. Of all the great medical advances of the last century, surely the one that stands out as perhaps the greatest is the Nuremberg Code of 1947, which requires a competent patient giving informed consent to treatment and to research efforts. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

19.
The following conclusions appear to be justified: (1) There is no evidence that happiness in marriage is a function of understanding the mate or is related to the similarity of selves of the mates. (2) Evidence indicates that marital happiness is associated with similarity of self perceptions of the mates. (3) Husbands and wives are no more similar in self perceptions than randomly paired men and women. (4) Marital happiness is related to the conformity of men to self perceptions of their sex. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

20.
Analyses assessed the degrees to which personality accounts for associations between marital quality and parenting and mediates genetic contributions to these relationships. Participants included 318 male and 544 female same-sex twin pairs from the Twin and Offspring Study in Sweden. All twins completed self-report measures of marital quality and personality (anxiousness, aggression, sociability). Composite measures of parent negativity and warmth were derived from the twins’ and their adolescent children’s ratings of the twins’ disciplinary styles and the emotional tone of the parent–child relationship. Observational ratings of marital quality and parenting were also obtained for a subset of twins. Personality characteristics explained 33% to 42% of the covariance between reported marital quality and parenting and 26% to 28% of the covariance between observed marital quality and parenting. For both sets of analyses, personality accounted for more than half of the genetic contributions to covariance between marital quality and parenting. Results indicate that personality significantly contributes to associations between marital quality and parenting and that personality is an important path through which genetic factors contribute to family relationships. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

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