In contact with grief: Affectionate touch and intimacy in bereaved parents

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State: Public
Version: author
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_CC6D82F62687
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Minutes: analyse of a published work.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
In contact with grief: Affectionate touch and intimacy in bereaved parents
Journal
International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology
Author(s)
Ergun Turan Deniz, Buyukcan-Tetik Asuman, Debrot Anik, Schut Henk, Stroebe Margaret
ISSN
1697-2600
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
24
Number
4
Pages
100534
Language
english
Abstract
Although child loss impairs well-being, its impact on behavioral exchanges between bereaved parents remains understudied. We compared bereaved and non-bereaved couples regarding affectionate touch levels, the role of affectionate touch in intimacy, and the association between partners’ affectionate touch similarity and intimacy. Bereaved (228 couples, 27 individuals) and non-bereaved (258 couples, seven individuals) people participated in our seven-day diary study. Although bereaved and non-bereaved men reported equal affectionate touch, bereaved women's affectionate touch was lower than non-bereaved women's. Despite this discrepancy, multilevel analyses revealed that affectionate touch concurrently benefited both genders’ intimacy in bereaved and non-bereaved couples. For bereaved women, touch also contributed to next day's intimacy. We also showed that couples reported higher intimacy if both partners had higher vs. lower affectionate touch. Our findings highlight bereaved and non-bereaved couples’ similarity regarding the relational gains of affectionate touch and the promising function of affectionate touch in coping with loss.
Keywords
Affectionate touch, Intimacy, Child loss, Diary, Dyadic design
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
09/01/2025 13:21
Last modification date
26/03/2025 7:04
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