Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis

Abstract Background To analyze, in a multilevel context, the impact of individual-level relationship satisfaction on couples’ mean reports of aggression and agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression. Methods We conducted a quota sampling method to recruit a community sample of 2....

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Main Authors: José Luis Graña, María Luisa Cuenca, Natalia Redondo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-08-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1452-6
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spelling doaj-f984471b8dab4f4abd94fee5cae9782b2020-11-24T21:59:47ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2017-08-011711910.1186/s12888-017-1452-6Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysisJosé Luis Graña0María Luisa Cuenca1Natalia Redondo2Facultad de Psicología, Universidad ComplutenseFacultad de Psicología, Universidad ComplutenseFacultad de Psicología, Universidad ComplutenseAbstract Background To analyze, in a multilevel context, the impact of individual-level relationship satisfaction on couples’ mean reports of aggression and agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression. Methods We conducted a quota sampling method to recruit a community sample of 2.988 heterosexual adult couples from the Region of Madrid (Spain). Results The percentages of intimate partner aggression considering the highest report of aggression in the couple were around 60% of psychological aggression and 15% of physical aggression. Couples that used aggressive tactics showed low to moderate levels of agreement about physical and psychological aggression. Multilevel models confirm that women’s relationship satisfaction had a significant influence on the level of agreement about acts of psychological aggression, but the same pattern of results was not observed for men. On the other hand, men and women’s relationship satisfaction had no significant influence on the level of agreement about physical aggression. Conclusions Psychological aggression plays a more relevant role in women’s relationship satisfaction than physical aggression.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1452-6Partner aggressionAgreementReliabilityRelationship satisfactionDyadic data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author José Luis Graña
María Luisa Cuenca
Natalia Redondo
spellingShingle José Luis Graña
María Luisa Cuenca
Natalia Redondo
Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis
BMC Psychiatry
Partner aggression
Agreement
Reliability
Relationship satisfaction
Dyadic data
author_facet José Luis Graña
María Luisa Cuenca
Natalia Redondo
author_sort José Luis Graña
title Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis
title_short Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis
title_full Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis
title_fullStr Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis
title_full_unstemmed Relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis
title_sort relationship satisfaction and interpartner agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression: a multilevel analysis
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Abstract Background To analyze, in a multilevel context, the impact of individual-level relationship satisfaction on couples’ mean reports of aggression and agreement about acts of physical and psychological aggression. Methods We conducted a quota sampling method to recruit a community sample of 2.988 heterosexual adult couples from the Region of Madrid (Spain). Results The percentages of intimate partner aggression considering the highest report of aggression in the couple were around 60% of psychological aggression and 15% of physical aggression. Couples that used aggressive tactics showed low to moderate levels of agreement about physical and psychological aggression. Multilevel models confirm that women’s relationship satisfaction had a significant influence on the level of agreement about acts of psychological aggression, but the same pattern of results was not observed for men. On the other hand, men and women’s relationship satisfaction had no significant influence on the level of agreement about physical aggression. Conclusions Psychological aggression plays a more relevant role in women’s relationship satisfaction than physical aggression.
topic Partner aggression
Agreement
Reliability
Relationship satisfaction
Dyadic data
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1452-6
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AT nataliaredondo relationshipsatisfactionandinterpartneragreementaboutactsofphysicalandpsychologicalaggressionamultilevelanalysis
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