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Concurrent and Prospective Associations Between Communicated Emotional Arousal and Adjustment Among Couples Coping With Cancer
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AbstractBackgroundThe experience of cancer can create considerable emotional distress for patients and their committed partners. How couples communicate about cancer-related concerns can have important implications for adjustment. However, past research has primarily utilized cross-sectional designs and retrospective self-reports of couple communication. While informative, little is known about how patients and partners express emotion during conversations about cancer, and how these emotional patterns predict individual and relational adjustment.PurposeThe current investigation examined how patterns of emotional arousal within couples’ communication about cancer was associated with concurrent and prospective individual psychological and relational adjustment.MethodsAt baseline, 133 patients with stage II– breast, lung, or colorectal cancer and their partners completed a conversation about a cancer-related concern. Vocally expressed emotional arousal (f0) was extracted from recorded conversations. Couples completed self-report measures of individual psychological and relational adjustment at baseline and at 4, 8, and 12 months later.ResultsCouples who started the conversation higher in f0 (i.e., greater emotional arousal) reported better individual and relational adjustment at baseline. If the non-cancer partner had lower f0 relative to patients, this predicted worse individual adjustment across follow-up. Additionally, couples who maintained their level of f0 rather than decreasing later in the conversation reported improvements in individual adjustment across follow-up.ConclusionsElevated emotional arousal within a cancer-related conversation may be adaptive for adjustment, as it may reflect greater emotional engagement and processing of an important topic. These results may suggest ways for therapists to guide emotional engagement to enhance resilience in couples experiencing cancer.
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Title: Concurrent and Prospective Associations Between Communicated Emotional Arousal and Adjustment Among Couples Coping With Cancer
Description:
AbstractBackgroundThe experience of cancer can create considerable emotional distress for patients and their committed partners.
How couples communicate about cancer-related concerns can have important implications for adjustment.
However, past research has primarily utilized cross-sectional designs and retrospective self-reports of couple communication.
While informative, little is known about how patients and partners express emotion during conversations about cancer, and how these emotional patterns predict individual and relational adjustment.
PurposeThe current investigation examined how patterns of emotional arousal within couples’ communication about cancer was associated with concurrent and prospective individual psychological and relational adjustment.
MethodsAt baseline, 133 patients with stage II– breast, lung, or colorectal cancer and their partners completed a conversation about a cancer-related concern.
Vocally expressed emotional arousal (f0) was extracted from recorded conversations.
Couples completed self-report measures of individual psychological and relational adjustment at baseline and at 4, 8, and 12 months later.
ResultsCouples who started the conversation higher in f0 (i.
e.
, greater emotional arousal) reported better individual and relational adjustment at baseline.
If the non-cancer partner had lower f0 relative to patients, this predicted worse individual adjustment across follow-up.
Additionally, couples who maintained their level of f0 rather than decreasing later in the conversation reported improvements in individual adjustment across follow-up.
ConclusionsElevated emotional arousal within a cancer-related conversation may be adaptive for adjustment, as it may reflect greater emotional engagement and processing of an important topic.
These results may suggest ways for therapists to guide emotional engagement to enhance resilience in couples experiencing cancer.
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