Depressive Symptoms and Conflict Behaviors: A Test of the Stress Generation Hypothesis in Romantic Couples During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Author:

Kim Andy J.1,Smith Martin M.2,Sherry Simon B.1,Rodriguez Lindsey M.3,Meier Sandra M.1,Nogueira-Arjona Raquel4,Deacon Hélène1,Abbass Allan1,Stewart Sherry H.1

Affiliation:

1. Dalhousie University, Halifax

2. University of British Columbia, Vancouver

3. University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

4. University of Roehampton, London; Dalhousie University, Halifax

Abstract

Introduction: In early 2020, North American jurisdictions required households (e.g., romantic couples) to isolate together to help mitigate the spread of COVID-19. This study provides a first look at the interplay of depressive symptoms and conflict behaviors among isolating couples, including tests of predictions of the stress generation hypothesis. Methods: Mixed-gender couples residing in Canada (N = 711) completed online measures across two waves. We used the actor-partner interdependence mediation model, with Wave 1 depressive symptoms as the predictor, Wave 1 conflict enactment as the mediator, and Wave 2 depressive symptoms as the outcome. Results: Depressive symptoms showed stability across Wave 1 and 2. Wave 1 depressive symptoms showed associations with Wave 1 conflict enactment. For men (but not women), Wave 1 conflict enactment was associated with their own and their partner's Wave 2 depressive symptoms. For both partners, Wave 1 conflict enacted by men mediated the association between Wave 1 depressive symptoms and Wave 2 depressive symptoms. Discussion: Our study confirms and extends the stress generation hypothesis to the pandemic context, showing that depressive symptoms may partially contribute to conflict for isolating couples and that conflict behaviors enacted by men toward their partner can exacerbate depressive symptoms in both partners.

Publisher

Guilford Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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