Relational problems and psychiatric symptoms in couple therapy

Ann-Marie Lundblad, Kjell Hansson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Lundblad A-M, Hansson K. Relational problems and psychiatric symptoms in couple therapyInt J Soc Welfare 2005: 14: 256 -264 c Blackwell Publishing, 2005.This article describes couples attending family counselling in Sweden. The study group is compared with clinical groups and non-clinical groups. Self-rating instruments were com-pleted by 317 women and 312 men to evaluate the following: marital satisfaction (DAS), expressed emotion (QAFM), family climate (FC), psychiatric symptoms (SCL-90) and sense of coherence (SOC). This group had several problems: marital relationships, disrupted family functioning, dyadic interactions characterised by criticism and open arguments, and multiple psychological symptoms. The women were espe-cially discontent in the relationship, and they exhibited higher symptom strain and lower sense of coherence than the men did. Compared with non-clinical populations, this group was severely distressed and was similar to in-patient families in child psychiatric clinics. The low sense of coherence of the individuals in the group under study means that their sense of having a meaningful life and their ability to comprehend and manage problems were severely compromised. Adequate and comprehensive treatment within the framework of social pro-grammes should be made available to these couples and others in a similar situation.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)256-264
JournalInternational Journal of Social Welfare
Volume14
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2005

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Social Work

Free keywords

  • expressed emotion
  • psychiatric symptoms
  • distress
  • marital satisfaction
  • couple therapy

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