Abstract
For better or worse, the people one lives with may exert a powerful influence on one’s mental health, perhaps especially during times of stress. The COVID-19 pandemic—a large-scale stressor that prompted health recommendations to stay home to reduce disease spread—provided a unique context for examining how the people who share one’s home may shape one’s mental health. A seven-wave longitudinal study assessed mental health month to month before and during the pandemic (February through September 2020) in two diverse samples of U.S. adults (N = 656; N = 544). Preregistered analyses demonstrated that people living with close others (children and/or romantic partners) experienced better well-being before and during the pandemic’s first 6 months. These groups also experienced unique increases in ill-being during the pandemic’s onset, but parents’ ill-being also recovered more quickly. These findings highlight the crucial protective function of close relationships for mental health both generally and amid a pandemic.
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Sisson, N. M., Willroth, E. C., Le, B. M., & Ford, B. Q. (2022). The Benefits of Living With Close Others: A Longitudinal Examination of Mental Health Before and During a Global Stressor. Clinical Psychological Science, 10(6), 1083–1097. https://doi.org/10.1177/21677026211053320
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