Michael Redd
The University of Akron, Counseling, Graduate Student
- Counseling, Mental Health, Psychotherapy and Counseling, Counseling Psychology, Child and adolescent mental health, Marriage & Family Therapy, Marriage and Family Therapy, Trauma, PTSD, Multicultural Counseling, and 10 moreCouples Counseling and Therapy, Couple Therapy, Interpersonal Systems (families, groups, couples), Therapeutic Work with Adult Victims of Childhood Sexual Abuse, Sex Therapy, Emotion Regulation, Emotionally Focused Therapy, Mindfulness & CBT, Mindfulness, and MBCTedit
The purpose of the present study was to replicate the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study framework, using relationship outcomes, and studied within the context of couple relationships. A thorough review of the literature on trauma,... more
The purpose of the present study was to replicate the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study framework, using relationship outcomes, and studied within the context of couple relationships. A thorough review of the literature on trauma, its prevalence, prior studies on ACEs, trauma and couples, and partner selection is presented. A secondary data analysis of 146 couples from a clinical source was used to test the present study’s hypotheses. Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (APIM) was used to test the hypothesis that an individual’s ACE exposure history would be negatively related to both their own and their partner’s reported relationship quality. A cluster analysis was used to test the hypothesis that couples could be statistically grouped by ACE score combinations, and an ANOVA was used to test average group differences on relationship quality. Regression analyses were used to test hypotheses about partner selection. Results from the analysis include: (1) a small but significant negative impact of an individual’s ACEs on their own reported relationship quality, but no finding of a significant impact on their partner’s reported relationship quality; (2) a small but significant relationship between partner ACE scores; (3) a preliminary ability to group couples by ACE score combinations into three clusters (Low-Low, High-Moderate, Moderate-High) and a small but significant difference between two of the clusters; (4) an increased likelihood that couples will be partnered with those who have more similar than different ACE scores, and a significant trend that as ACEs increase, the likelihood of being partnered with someone who has similar ACEs will decrease; (5) a small but significant dose-response relationship between increasing ACEs and the likelihood of being partnered with someone who has more than minimal ACEs. Further discussion of the results, implications, limitations of the study, and future research directions are also included.