Nursing Open (Sep 2021)

Parental‐couple separation during the transition to parenthood

  • Åsa Gamgam Leanderz,
  • Jenny Hallgren,
  • Maria Henricson,
  • Margaretha Larsson,
  • Caroline Bäckström

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.803
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
pp. 2622 – 2636

Abstract

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Abstract Aim To evaluate factors associated with parental separation during the parenthood transition. Design Prospective, longitudinal and explorative. Methods This is a quantitative longitudinal study of N784 subjects throughout the pregnancy journey with multivariate regression analysis of survey data derived from three validated measurement scales; the Sense of Coherence scale, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support and the Perceived Quality of the Dyadic Relationship scale conducted 2014–2016. Results N17 participants separated at 2 years. Parental separation was significantly greater for those women and partners with low or changing sense of coherence, perceived social support and perceived quality of the parental‐couple relationship indexes. Partners with a change in sense of coherence (p: .003) and perceived quality of the parental‐couple relationship (p: .020) between 1 week and 2 years were at greater risk for separation. Attending professional preparatory support with a partner for women (p: .013) and attending the “Inspirational Lecture” for partners (p: .046) were, to a lesser extent, associated with a risk of parental separation.

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