Constructing We-ness: A Communal Coping Intervention for Couples Facing Chronic Illness
Name:
CommunCope_FamProc20.pdf
Size:
254.0Kb
Format:
PDF
Description:
Final Accepted Manuscript
Author
Rohrbaugh, Michael JAffiliation
Univ Arizona, Dept PsycholIssue Date
2020-09-27Keywords
Chronic illnesscommunal coping
Couple Intervention
Health Behavior Change
Narrative Therapy
we-talk
afrontamiento comunitario
cambio en el comportamiento relacionado con la salud
enfermedad crónica
intervención en la pareja
terapia narrativa
uso de nosotros al hablar
伴侣敢于
健康行为变化
共同应对
叙事治疗
我们话语
长期疾病
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
WILEYCitation
Rohrbaugh, M. J. (2020). Constructing We‐ness: A Communal Coping Intervention for Couples Facing Chronic Illness. Family Process.Journal
Family processRights
© 2020 Family Process Institute.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
Communal coping occurs when relationship partners view a stressful health problem as "ours," rather than yours or mine, and take collaborative action to deal with it. Although research employing linguistic (we-talk) and other measures of communal coping demonstrates relevance to a variety of chronic illnesses, the literature offers little about how clinicians can actively promote we-ness and teamwork to help patients and their partners achieve the health benefits this appears to confer. This paper highlights clinical and supporting scientific features of a narrative intervention designed to foster communal coping by couples in which one partner has a chronic illness. The illustrative illness is diabetes, but with modification the protocol is suitable for other chronic conditions as well. Grounded in systemic and narrative models of problem maintenance and change, the communal coping intervention represents a distillation of research and clinical experience with family consultation over several decades. In contrast to more directive and educational approaches, the intervention consists entirely of questions, with no direct suggestions or instruction about how patients, partners, or couples should change. These questions comprise 8 sequential modules (Coping Challenges, Trajectory and Focus, Illness as External Invader, You as a Couple, Past Teamwork in Overcoming Adversity, Present and Future Teamwork, Obstacles to Teamwork, and Wrap-Up), described here in manual-like detail.Note
12 month embargo; first published 27 September 2020ISSN
0014-7370EISSN
1545-5300PubMed ID
32981098Version
Final accepted manuscriptae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/famp.12595
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- Partner Pronoun Use, Communal Coping, and Abstinence during Couple-Focused Intervention for Problematic Alcohol Use.
- Authors: Rentscher KE, Soriano EC, Rohrbaugh MJ, Shoham V, Mehl MR
- Issue date: 2017 Jun
- "I too have a responsibility for my partner's life": Communal coping among Malawian couples living with HIV and cardiometabolic disorders.
- Authors: Ruark A, Bidwell JT, Butterfield R, Weiser SD, Neilands TB, Mulauzi N, Mkandawire J, Conroy AA
- Issue date: 2024 Feb
- Implicit and Explicit Communal Coping in Couples with Recently Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetes.
- Authors: Helgeson VS, Jakubiak B, Seltman H, Hausmann L, Korytkowski M
- Issue date: 2017
- Communal Coping in Couples With Health Problems.
- Authors: Rentscher KE
- Issue date: 2019
- We-talk, communal coping, and cessation success in a couple-focused intervention for health-compromised smokers.
- Authors: Rohrbaugh MJ, Shoham V, Skoyen JA, Jensen M, Mehl MR
- Issue date: 2012 Mar
