Abstract

Becoming an adoptive parent is a particularly stressful transition, given the additional challenges couples have to face. Dyadic coping, an under-investigated dimension in the adoption literature, may play a relevant role for prospective adoptive couples’ ability to better cope with the adoptive process. The general aim of the present study was to investigate the association between dyadic coping and relationship functioning, in terms of relationship satisfaction and couple generativity, among prospective adoptive couples. Participants were 103 prospective adoptive couples pursuing international adoption in Italy. Couples were asked to fill in a self-report questionnaire. Results of the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model showed that prospective adoptive partners reported high levels of positive and common dyadic coping and low levels of negative dyadic coping – suggesting partners’ ability to successfully cope together with a common stressor – a high level of relationship satisfaction, and an average level of couple generativity. Moreover, analyses showed significant actor effects of one’s own perception of the partner’s dyadic coping (positive, negative, and common) on one’s own relationship satisfaction and on couple generativity for both wives and husbands. With regard to partner effects, we found that both partners’ perceptions of the other’s dyadic coping responses (positive, negative, and common) were associated with the other’s relationship satisfaction, with the only exception of wives’ perceptions of common dyadic coping, which were not associated with their husbands’ relationship satisfaction. As for couple generativity, the only significant partner effect referred to negative dyadic coping responses for both wives and husbands.

Highlights

  • Prospective Adoptive Couples: Stressors and ResourcesBecoming parents is a crucial family transition associated with significant relational, psychological, and social changes

  • The sample was composed of partners that generally reported to perceive the other as highly supportive, to successfully cope together with a common stressor, showing similar or slightly better dyadic coping abilities than reported in other Italian samples (Donato et al, 2015, 2018; Parise et al, 2018)

  • Correlations between dyadic coping indexes as well as between dyadic coping and outcomes were as expected. In both wives and husbands, positive and common dyadic coping were positively correlated with each other and negatively with negative dyadic coping. In both wives and husbands, positive and common dyadic coping were positively associated with both relationship satisfaction and couple generativity, while negative dyadic coping was negatively correlated with the above outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

Prospective Adoptive Couples: Stressors and ResourcesBecoming parents is a crucial family transition associated with significant relational, psychological, and social changes. Prospective adoptive partners often become parents late in life (in Italy in 2015, the average age for the husband was 45.8 years and for the wife was 44.1 years), after a long waiting period (3 years and 7 months on average in Italy in 2015) (Commission for Intercountry Adoption, 2014/2015), and they expect to cope with children who are likely to be emotionally and behaviorally compromised at arrival, due to their past experiences (i.e., abandonment, neglect, institutionalization; Canzi et al, 2018) All these stressors are likely to impact on couples’ psychological well-being (Goldberg et al, 2010) as well as on their future adjustment to parenthood (Salcuni et al, 2015). These data suggest that to successfully cope with this demanding pre-adoption phase, couples are required to pool all their individual and relational resources, especially marital ones

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