Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology University of Denver Denver CO
2. Human Development and Family Studies University of Illinois Urbana‐Champaign IL
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveWe posit that evaluators of relationship education interventions can explore a policy relevant outcome by assessing relationship stability and conflict in a single index that is based on the literature on the effects of divorce and marital distress on children. We provide an empirical example from a randomized trial.BackgroundThe U.S. Administration for Children and Families funds community‐based projects using relationship education with a foundational goal of fostering stable and healthy relationships. Assessing this outcome requires an approach different from separately analyzing stability and relationship quality.MethodWe used data (N = 1,156 couples) from a randomized trial of Family Expectations to test the Stable Low‐Conflict Index, comparing couples assigned to the intervention to couples assigned to an untreated control group at a follow‐up 8 to 9 months postintervention.ResultsIntervention couples were more likely to be in a stable, low‐conflict relationship at the follow up than control couples (b = .36, SE = .15, odds ratio = 1.44, p = .014).ConclusionAn index based on empirical precedence showed evidence of an intervention impact in a community‐based program.ImplicationsEvaluators of family policy linked interventions may advance the field by exploring outcomes that encapsulate aspects of both relationship stability and quality.
Funder
Administration for Children and Families
Subject
Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education
Cited by
1 articles.
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