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Short-term functional health and well-being after marital separation: does initiator status make a difference?

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-06-01, 00:00 authored by Belinda Hewitt, Gavin Turrell
The authors investigated the health consequences of marital separation and whether the partners who initiated the separation had better health than those who did not. The data came from the Households, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) panel study (2001-2007), comprising an analytic sample of 1,786 men and 2,068 women who were in their first marriages in 2001. For participants who separated, the authors distinguished between self-initiated, partner-initiated, and jointly initiated separations. Using linear random-intercept models, they examined scores on the 8 physical and mental health dimensions of Short Form 36, with scale scores ranging from 0 to 100. The results indicated that in general, men who separated had a decline in health, although this was more pronounced for mental dimensions than for physical dimensions. Among separated men, those whose partner initiated the separation had poorer mental health than those for whom the separation was self-initiated or jointly initiated (-4.61). Women's physical health improved with separation, but their mental health declined. For separated women, those whose partner initiated the separation had lower scores on the general health (-5.39), role-emotional (-11.08), and mental health (-7.18) scales than women who self-initiated separation. The health consequences of separation were less severe for self- or jointly initiated separations, suggesting that not all marital dissolutions are equally bad for health.

History

Journal

American journal of epidemiology

Volume

173

Pagination

1308-1318

Location

Oxford, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0002-9262

eISSN

1476-6256

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, The Author

Issue

11

Publisher

Oxford University Press

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