Login / Signup

Relationship standards and Malay Muslim couples' marital satisfaction.

Noratthiah NordinWilliam Kim HalfordFiona Kate BarlowKhairul A Mastor
Published in: Journal of marital and family therapy (2023)
Relationship standards are beliefs about what is important in high-quality couple relationships. Clarifying standards cross-culturally informs theory about relationship quality and goals for culturally appropriate couple therapy. The current study assessed four standards (Couple Bond, Family Responsibility, Relationship Effort, and Religion) in n = 113 Malay Muslim couples, and the association of those standards with marital satisfaction. All four standards were strongly endorsed, Religion was the most strongly endorsed, and there were minimal sex differences. Separate actor-partner interdependence models showed actor effects of all four standards on own satisfaction for husbands and wives, partner effects of three of the four husbands' standards (not Relationship Effort) on wives' satisfaction, but no partner effects of female standards on male satisfaction. The findings underscore the importance of all four standards in Malay Muslim marriages and that attention to all these standards might need to be part of couple therapy with Malay couples.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • hiv infected
  • men who have sex with men
  • human immunodeficiency virus
  • smoking cessation