Exploring associations among baseline emotion regulation and change in relationship satisfaction among couples in a randomized controlled trial of emotionally focused therapy compared to usual care

Author:

White VanBoxel Jennifer M.1ORCID,Miller Debra L.2ORCID,Morgan Preston3ORCID,Iqbal Nazia4,Edwards Caitlin5ORCID,Wittenborn Andrea K.56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Center for Applied Psychological and Family Studies Northwestern University Evanston Illinois USA

2. Community Mental Health for Central Michigan Director of Family Services Mt Pleasant Michigan USA

3. Human Development and Family Science Oklahoma State University Stillwater Oklahoma USA

4. Psychology International Islamic University Islamabad Pakistan

5. Human Development and Family Studies Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

6. Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine Michigan State University Grand Rapids Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundData from a two‐arm randomized controlled trial of emotionally focused therapy (EFT) compared to usual care were used to examine whether baseline emotion regulation influences relationship satisfaction for female and male partners. This is clinically relevant as clinicians have debated whether clients' initial emotion regulation skills predict positive outcomes in EFT.MethodsDyadic multilevel modeling was used to determine whether baseline emotion regulation predicted both initial levels and change in relationship satisfaction and whether that relationship differed by treatment group (i.e., EFT or usual care).ResultsBaseline emotion regulation difficulties were associated with lower initial relationship satisfaction. However, baseline emotion regulation difficulties were not associated with change in relationship satisfaction over the course of treatment and this relationship did not differ by treatment group.ConclusionsResults demonstrate that partners with diverse presentations of emotion regulation at baseline may benefit from couple therapy.

Funder

Fahs-Beck Fund for Research and Experimentation

Publisher

Wiley

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