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Family Satisfaction in Air Force Families as a Function of Family Strengths, Resources and Coping Following RelocationOlsen, Mary Gyler 01 May 1988 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate to what extent the level of coping skills, internal resources, social support, perception and pile-up of life events affect Air Force families ' adjustments after relocation. The major objectives were threefold: (a) to assess which of the husbands' and wives' strengths and resources contributed to the family's adjustment to the stress associated with permanent change of station moves, (b) to explore whether wives' levels of coping are critical to family adjustment and (c) to determine if the types and/or levels of coping used are significantly different at two points in time after the move. A secondary objective was an exploration through factor analyses of the construct validity for this population of four of the measures used: FACES, Quality of Ufe, Ways of Coping Checklist and Social Support Inventory.
Results showed that for the husbands and wives pile-up of life events had a significant inverse relationship to mean Quality of Ufewith Displacement/Denial, FACES and Perception also correlated for the wives. For both husbands and wives, the FACES discrepancy score was significantly correlated with the discrepancy Quality of Ufe score with pile-up and Reframing also correlated for the wives. Controlling for the influence of the moderator variables, pile-up of life events was significantly correlated with mean Quality of Life for the husbands while pile-up and Social Support were correlated for the wives. The wives had pile-up, Reframing, Discrepancy FACES and Self-focused Coping which showed a significant correlation with discrepancy Quality of Life.
Wives showed a greater use of several types of coping including Positive Focus, Social Support, Displacement/Denial and Reframing while the husbands showed a greater use of coworkers for social support and Problem-focused Coping. A higher usage of special groups for social support was the only difference found between the individuals who had moved at different points in time. In addition, the results provided further empirical support for the Double ABCX Family Stress Model. Suggestions were made for interventions to help to alleviate the stress of moving for the military family.
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Role of Family Satisfaction in Predicting Life Satisfaction Trajectories Over the First Five Years Following Acquired DisabilityHernández, Caitlin Louise 2012 August 1900 (has links)
This study aimed to model the trajectories of life satisfaction as influenced by functional impairment and family satisfaction over a five-year period following spinal cord injury, severe burns, and lower-extremity fractures. Marital status and injury type were included to estimate predicted life satisfaction over the five-year period post-injury. Measures: Six-hundred sixty-two participants completed the Functional Independence Measure, Family Satisfaction Scale, and Life Satisfaction Inventory at 12, 24, 48, and 60 months post-injury. Results: Family satisfaction was a consistent predictor of life satisfaction across models. Consistent with past research (Resch et al., 2009), functional impairment was significantly predictive of life satisfaction. Conclusions: Individuals predicted to be most at risk were those individuals with severe burns, who were divorced or separated, with low family satisfaction, and/or high functional impairment.
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Accepting Influence in Military Couples: Implications for Couple- and Family-Level OutcomesPeterson, Clairee, Lucier-Greer, Mallory 13 April 2019 (has links)
Gottman identified the phenomenon accepting influence in couple relationships, defining it as the action of letting one’s partner influence their opinions, as well as the approach of being open-minded towards one’s partner. In this study, we examine accepting influence among a dyadic sample of military couples (N=242 couples). We first replicate Gottman’s findings which link accepting influence to couple satisfaction, and then expand this area of research by examining how accepting influence within the couple relationship relates to family-level outcomes based on theoretical underpinnings from systems theory and the spillover hypothesis. To model relationships within and between partners, we utilize an actor-partner interdependence model. Results demonstrate that accepting influence is related to both couple and family satisfaction in military families, although these were primarily actor effects (i.e., perceptions of accepting influence were primarily associated with personal reports of couple and family satisfaction). Implications for practice and research will be discussed.
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Family Grief Communication, Self-Construal, and the Functioning of Grieving College StudentsChye Hong Liew (8889137) 27 July 2020 (has links)
<p>Grieving the deaths of immediate and extended family
members as well as friends is a common experience among traditional-age college
students. The overarching
purpose of this study was to provide a more nuanced understanding of how
various family grief communication factors (i.e., frequency, quality,
willingness to communicate—personal/perceived family, reasons for grief
communication avoidance—self-protection/relationship-protection) and self-construal might
be related to the post-loss functioning of grieving traditional-age college
students. Using hierarchical multiple regressions, I analyzed survey data from
369 grieving college students who were between ages 18 and 24 and had
experienced the death of at least one individual they considered as family
member within the last two years. First, the current findings indicated
that the more frequent grieving students communicated about their grief with
their family, the stronger their grief reactions. Second, the more students
reported family grief communication of high quality, the weaker their grief
reactions and the higher their post-loss family satisfaction. Third, there were
no relationships between grieving college students’ personal willingness or their
perceived family willingness to communicate about grief and their own grief
reactions. Fourth, grieving students’ post-loss family satisfaction levels were
similar regardless of how personally willing they were to communicate their
grief, but increased as they perceived their family members as more willing to
communicate about their grief. Fifth, the more grieving students avoided family
grief communicate for self-protection reasons, the stronger their grief
reactions and the lower their post-loss family satisfaction. Sixth, college
students reported similar levels of grief reactions and post-loss family
satisfaction regardless of how much they reported avoiding grief communication
to protect their family relationships. Seventh, quality, personal and family
willingness to communication, and reasons for grief communication avoidance did
not moderate the
relationship between the frequency of family grief communication and grieving
students’ post-loss functioning. Eighth, grieving students reported
similar levels of grief reactions and post-loss family satisfaction regardless
of how much they identified with interdependent self-construal, independent
self-construal, or a combination of both. Finally, the relationships between
grieving students’ reasons for grief communication avoidance (i.e.,
self-protection, relationship protection) and their post-loss functioning (i.e., grief reactions, post-loss
family
satisfaction) remained similar regardless of how much they identified with
independent or interdependent self-construal. The results of this study may be
used to inform clinical interventions and outreach efforts for grieving
traditional-age college students and their family members. </p>
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Canadian Family Leisure, Family Functioning, and Family Satisfaction: A Family PerspectiveNua, Shaun C 01 December 2013 (has links) (PDF)
The purpose of this study was to further examine the relationship between family leisure variables and the dependent variables of family functioning and satisfaction with family life among a broad, national sample of Canadian families using the Core and Balance framework. Specifically, this study examined how both family leisure involvement (core and balance) and family leisure satisfaction contributed to the explanation of variance in family functioning and satisfaction with family life. Because the data were nested in families, this study accounted for family-level variance by incorporating mixed modeling. The sample consisted of 943 families across Canada including one parent and one child between the ages of 11 and 16 (n = 1886). Findings added to previous Canadian family leisure studies by reporting empirical relationships between family leisure variables and outcome variables and doing so from a broad national sample. Findings were also consistent with trends in other countries reporting satisfaction with core family leisure involvement as the single strongest predictor of both family functioning and satisfaction with family life among Canadian families. Furthermore, while core family leisure satisfaction was the driving force in the explanation of variance in family satisfaction, findings suggest there must be participation in both core and balance family leisure. Additional implications for Canadian families, scholars, professionals, and policy makers are discussed.
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Family satisfaction following spinal cord injury: Long-term follow-upSolomon, Joel W. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Development and initial validation of the work-family facilitation scaleHolbrook, Sheila K 01 June 2005 (has links)
The benefits of occupying multiple roles have typically been overlooked. One reason for this oversight is the lack of a well-established scale measuring work-family facilitation. This study developed and validated short, self-report scales of work-to-family facilitation and family-to-work facilitation. Based on conceptualizations of work and family facilitation presented in current research content domains and definitions of the constructs are presented. Work-to-family facilitation is defined as a form of role facilitation in which the experiences in the job, work skills, and emotional gratification from work makes participation in the family easier. Family-to-work facilitation is defined as a form of role facilitation in which the experiences in the family, family skills, and emotional gratification from family makes participation in work easier. Advocated procedures were used to develop the scales and test dimensionality and internal consistency.
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Relations between lifestyle and life satisfaction / Relaciones entre estilo de vida y satisfacción vitalSánchez López, María del Pilar, Díaz Morales, Juan Francisco 25 September 2017 (has links)
The analysis of use of time during the week and the weekend provides an appropiate measure of the lifestyle. We describe the characteristics of the different groups and they are studied in relation to the lifestyle and work and family satisfaction. The concept of Congruence/Incongruence is used for analyzing the relationship between work and family environments. The conclusion is that those worlds are not independent. Moreover, lifestyle and satisfaction show some associations with demographic variables such as sex, kind of couple, and vital cycle (the age and the fact of having children). / El análisis de la distribución del tiempo que realizan las personas durante la semana y el fin de semana proporciona una adecuada medida del estilo de vida. Se describen y estudian las características de diferentes grupos de personas en función del estilo de vida y la satisfacción en el ámbito laboral y familiar. A través del concepto Congruencia/Incongruencia se analiza la relación entre el entorno laboral y familiar, donde se comprueba que ambos, mundos no son independientes. A su vez, el estilo de vida y la satisfacción muestran determinadas relaciones con variables demográficas como sexo, tipo de pareja y ciclo vital (edad y tener/no tener hijos).
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The impact of work-family conflict on working women in Taiwan : the effects of organizational supportLu, Yu-Ying January 2007 (has links)
A cross-sectional survey was undertaken to examine the impact of organizational support on work-family conflict experienced by Taiwanese working women. A stress model of work and family interference was applied in the Taiwanese context; the current study examined whether the results of western studies of work-family conflict can be generalised to the Taiwanese population. The enactment of the Gender Equality of Employment Law in Taiwan in 2002 was a further impetus for the research. The study examined the effects of organizational family-friendly policies and cultural support of family responsibilities on work-family conflict and well-being. Women (aged between 15 and 64 years) in paid employment working in three public universities in northern Taiwan formed the sample population for this research. Stratified random sampling by occupation was used to enhance representativeness. The total sample consisted of 441 participants, made up of 288 general staff and 153 academic staff. The data was collected with several tested and widely used instruments (including the Family-Friendly Policies Usage and Satisfaction Questionnaires, Work-Family Culture Questionnaire, Work-Family Conflict Scale, Job Satisfaction Questionnaire, Family Satisfaction Questionnaire, Perceived Stress Scale, and Physical Symptoms Inventory). Descriptive analysis was used to examine demographic variables and all the measures; correlation analysis was used to examine the relationships between selected research variables; T-test, chi-square test and one-way ANOVA were used to characterize the differences between groups. Hierarchical multiple regression was performed to test the research hypotheses. The findings showed that work-family conflict was strongly linked with lower job and family satisfaction, greater stress and more severe physical ailments. Implementing family-friendly policies and creating a supportive work environment can help working women to manage their work-family conflict and improve their health outcomes. A supportive organizational culture has been confirmed by this research as important in preventing the negative consequences of work-family conflict. However, such conflict did not predict the levels of physical symptoms. Employer-supported dependant care policies were not associated with the level of work-family conflict. In addition, organizational cultural support did not predict the usage of family-friendly policies. This study has provided evidence that some relationships could be generalised, across western and Chinese societies, between organizational support and work-family conflict, and between work-family conflict and an individual's well-being, although specificities within each cultural remain and require different methods of assessment. In conclusion, a western theoretical model of work-family conflict was found to be acceptable and feasible to implement within the Taiwanese population, since the majority of the hypotheses were supported. This research provided valuable information for healthcare professionals, policy makers and organizations, presenting ways to help working women to manage the conflicting demands of work and family roles better.
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The nursing home five star rating: How does it compare to resident and family views of care?Williams, Anthony R. 18 October 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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