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Marital Interventions: Participation, Helpfulness, and Change in a Nationally Representative Sample
Author(s) -
White Thomas Jack Esplin,
Duncan Stephen F.,
Yorgason Jeremy B.,
James Spencer L.,
Holmes Erin K.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
family relations
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1741-3729
pISSN - 0197-6664
DOI - 10.1111/fare.12403
Subject(s) - helpfulness , psychological intervention , relationship education , intervention (counseling) , outreach , psychology , religiosity , sample (material) , population , social psychology , demography , political science , sociology , chemistry , chromatography , psychiatry , law
Objective To examine how often early‐married couples have participated in marital interventions and how helpful and change‐producing these interventions are perceived to be in a national probability sample. Background Past research provides an unclear view of frequency of participation in marital interventions yet suggests that participation is both helpful and change‐producing. However, these studies are limited by their demographics, regions, and samples. A nationally representative, population‐level study of newlywed couples would help overcome these limitations and provide generalizable answers to the field. Method A sample of 1,562 individuals who indicated participation in a marriage intervention either before or after marriage was drawn from a nationally representative sample known as the Couple Relationships and Transition Experiences (CREATE) survey. Multilevel models were used to address the research questions. Results Just under 2 in 5 (38.3%) early‐married individuals participated in an intervention designed to prepare for or strengthen their marriage. Counseling was perceived to be the most helpful and change‐producing intervention, with religiosity, education, and gender moderating this association. Conclusion This study provides a first‐of‐its‐kind national picture of participation rates and perceptions of the effectiveness of marriage interventions among early‐married couples. Implications Findings may help energize marketing and outreach efforts and may encourage varied strategies to increase participation rates.