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Intimate Partner Relationship, Coping Strategies and Somatic Symptoms in Married Women


Article Information

Title: Intimate Partner Relationship, Coping Strategies and Somatic Symptoms in Married Women

Authors: Seemab Akhtar, Samia Rani, Quratulaein Hassan, Arsalan Khan, Nosheen Rahim

Journal: Journal of Social Sciences Review (JSSR)

HEC Recognition History
Category From To
Y 2024-10-01 2025-12-31
Y 2022-07-01 2023-06-30

Publisher: Nishtar Degree College and School System, Wari Dir Upper

Country: Pakistan

Year: 2025

Volume: 5

Issue: 4

Language: en

DOI: 10.62843/jssr.v5i4.604

Keywords: Employment statusCoping StrategiesFamily structureProblem-focused copingSomatic SymptomsIntimate Partner RelationshipsEmotion-Focused CopingDyadic Coping

Categories

Abstract

The present study examined the relationship between intimate partner relationships, coping strategies, and somatic symptoms in married women. A correlational research design was used in the research, with a total sample size of N=200 married women. Snowball sampling was used to gather data from married women. Standardized tools measured relationship quality, somatic symptoms, and coping styles, including emotion-focused and problem-focused coping. The results indicated that poor relationship quality was significantly associated with increased somatic complaints or symptoms in married women. Emotion-focused coping was positively correlated with higher somatic complaints, while problem-focused coping showed a negative relationship, indicating its protective role. Furthermore, dyadic coping partially mediated the link between relationship quality and somatic symptoms. Group comparisons revealed that unemployed women reported significantly more somatic symptoms than employed women. Similarly, women from nuclear families showed higher levels of somatic symptoms compared to those from joint family systems. These findings emphasize the psychosomatic impact of relationship stress and coping style and suggest the need for low-cost, culturally sensitive couple-based interventions for married women. Implications can be done in future for further guideline and clinical purpose.


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