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Articles

Adult attachment and the perceived cost of housework and child care

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Pages 508-519 | Received 19 Sep 2013, Accepted 14 Jul 2014, Published online: 15 Sep 2014
 

Abstract

Objective: This study examined the link between new mothers’ attachment orientation and the perceived cost of sole responsibility in housework and child care. Background: The transition to motherhood can be very stressful, and according to the Vulnerability Stress Adaptation Model (VSA model), the way it affects the couple relationship is likely to depend on interacting factors from different domains of risk (e.g. individual and couple level). We expected interactions to appear between domains of attachment and labour division. The hypothesis was that sole responsibility in child care and housework would predict lower relationship satisfaction, particularly among mothers who were high on attachment insecurity. Methods: Data from self-report measures of adult attachment, child care, housework and relationship satisfaction were collected from 255 first-time mothers at six months postpartum. Results: Sole responsibility in child care predicted lower relationship satisfaction, particularly among mothers who were high on attachment avoidance. This interaction effect was significant but small. Among main effects, higher levels of either attachment anxiety or avoidance were linked with lower relationship satisfaction and lower levels of sole responsibility in childcare was linked with higher relationship satisfaction. Conclusion: These findings provide new data on the how risk factors from separate domains combine, and implications are discussed in terms of applying the VSA model when developing preventive interventions for new mothers.

Notes

1. We thereby exclude the group of more time flexible tasks (such as household repairs, yard care, paying bills) that in traditional gender role structures are more often performed by men. This exclusion was based on previous findings that time flexible tasks are less successful in explaining variance in fairness evaluations and marital satisfaction (Coltrane, Citation2000).

2. Although ‘housework’ in many studies includes child minding, we measure this concept separately, because withdrawal from child care tasks may play a distinct role in early family dynamics (Cox et al., Citation1999).

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