• Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or My Tools.
Impact Factor:1.459 | Ranking:Family Studies 18 out of 43 | Communication 18 out of 79 | Psychology, Social 32 out of 62
Source:2016 Release of Journal Citation Reports with Source: 2015 Web of Science Data

Consequences of relationship status and quality for subjective well-being

  1. Claire M. Kamp Dush
    1. Cornell University, cmk54{at}cornell.edu
  1. Paul R. Amato
    1. The Pennsylvania State University

Abstract

This study examined the links among relationship status, relationship happiness, and a latent measure of subjective well-being. Using the study of Marital Instability over the Life Course, we found that married individuals reported the highest level of subjective well-being, followed (in order) by individuals in cohabiting relationships, steady dating relationships, casual dating relationships, and individuals who dated infrequently or not at all. Individuals in happy relationships reported a higher level of subjective well-being than did individuals in unhappy relationships, irrespective of relationship status. Even with relationship happiness controlled, however, relationship status was associated with subjective well-being. A longitudinal analysis suggested that shifting into more committed relationships was followed by improvements in subjective well-being. Little support was found for the assumption that people with a high level of well-being select themselves into more committed relationships.

| Table of Contents