Perceptions of Marriage Related to Engagement in Conjoint Therapy |
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Authors: | Kenneth Kressel Samuel Slipp |
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Affiliation: | Samuel Slipp MD, is a Clinical Professor in Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016;Kenneth Kressel, PhD, is Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08903 |
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Abstract: | The pre-treatment marital perceptions of 36 continuing couples were compared with those of 13 couples who terminated conjoint family therapy prior to the third session. Few statistically reliable differences between the groups were found in this pilot study, but the over-all pattern of results was consistent with clinical theory and empirical findings in related areas. Compared to terminators, continuing husbands had a more positive view of family life and perceived themselves as more closely allied with their wives. Continuing wives were more dissatisfied with matters in the family than either their husbands or terminating wives, but they also had more power vis a vis their husbands than did terminating wives. The results were interpreted in relation to a negotiation model of conjoint therapy. |
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