This study combines the fever model with communication privacy management to examine the conditions under which military wives are likely to disclose their family stressors or engage in protective buffering with their deployed husbands. Military wives (N =105) whose husbands were deployed and who had at least one child completed a web-based survey about the communication of family stressors during deployment. Protective buffering was associated with negative health symptoms, and disclosure was related to marital satisfaction. Wives' perceptions that their husbands were in dangerous situations as well as their perceptions that husbands were supportive of their disclosures were both related to protective buffering and disclosure.
Military Wives' Stressful Disclosures to Their Deployed Husbands: The Role of Protective Buffering
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Summary
Citation
Joseph, A. L., Afifi, T. D. (2010). Military Wives' Stressful Disclosures to Their Deployed Husbands: The Role of Protective Buffering. Journal of Applied Communication Research, 38, 412-434. doi:10.1080/00909882.2010.513997