The Relationship between Marital Satisfaction and Marital Stability among Married Individuals in Nifas Silk Lafto Sub-City of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Zewdu Girma*
College of Education and Behavioral Studies, Psychology Department, Madda Walabu University, Bale Robe, Ethiopia.
*Corresponding Author
Zewdu Girma,
College of Education and Behavioral Studies, Psychology Department, Madda Walabu University, Bale Robe, Ethiopia.
E-mail: E-mail-zewdug42@yahoo.com
Received: January 01, 2021; Accepted: January 16, 2021; Published: January 20, 2021
Citation: Zewdu Girma. The Relationship between Marital Satisfaction and Marital Stability among Married Individuals in Nifas Silk Lafto Sub-City of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Int J Behav Res Psychol. 2021;9(1):271-274. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.19070/2332-3000-2100048
Copyright: Zewdu Girma© 2020. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
Marital satisfaction and stability are important aspects of family life that shapes people’s health and well-being. The objective of this study was to measure the relationship between marital satisfaction and stability among married individuals in Nifas Silk Lafto Sub-City, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The target population for this study was all heterosexual married individuals, legally bound by the state of marriage as husband and wife. For this study, a systematic sampling technique along with a simple random sampling technique was employed to select 326 households. Frequency and percentage, means, standard deviation, and Pearson correlation were all used to compute sample statistic. The results showed that marital satisfaction and stability were significantly and positively correlated among married individuals, r = .68, α < .001. Females’ marital satisfaction and stability were strongly and significantly correlated p = .74, α < .001. Marital satisfaction and stability were also strongly and positively associated among males, p = .59, α < .001. In conclusion, the findings have significant implications in the enhancement of marital satisfaction and stability of married individuals, prevention of spouses’ conflict and divorce in the study sub-city of Addis Ababa.
2.Introduction
3.Method
4.Results
5.Discussion
6.Conclusion
7.Limitation and Future Direction
8.Acknowledgements
9.Ethics Approval and Consent to Participate
10.References
Keywords
Marital Satisfaction; Marital Stability; Married Individuals; Pearson Correlation.
Introduction
Marital satisfaction and stability are important aspects of family
life that shapes people’s health and well-being. Stable and pleasant
marital relationships are required not only for the health of
the spouses but also for children and thus, for the society in the
broader sense. But unstable and stressful marital relationship
leads to increased emotional disturbances and marital dissolution.
Marital satisfaction within the research literature refers to
how happy or satisfied a person is in his or her relationship; it is
a subjective experience and opinion. People are usually satisfied
when their needs are being met, and when people’s expectations
and desires are being satisfied. On the other hand, marital stability
is referred to the commitment within a marriage relationship
that is evidenced by the ability of the marriage to sustain through
time. Stable marriages are solid in that there is no plan to divorce.
Marital stability, therefore, refers to the relationship, not to the
spouses as individuals.
Fitzpatrick and Ritchie (1993) exposed that marital success is usually
defined as “marital stability” or “marital satisfaction”. Marital
stability is understood as whether a couple in marriage remains
together, instead of separating or divorcing. Marital satisfaction,
in contrast, refers to how spousal partners evaluate the quality of
their marriage relationship. It is important to note that marital stability
differs from marital satisfaction, though marital satisfaction
can serve as a moderator for marital stability (Karney & Bradbury,
1995). To emphasize the difference between marital satisfaction
and marital stability Lewis and Spanier (1979) identified four categories
of marriage: satisfied-stable (high quality), satisfied-unstable,
unsatisfied-unstable, and unsatisfied-stable marriages. According
to Heaton & Albrecht (1991), not all stable marriages are
joyful, but this category is relatively small with estimates that 7.4%
of married men and 7% of married women are in stable unhappy
marriages. Irrespective of their difference, many past researchers
have demonstrated that there is a strong positive correlation between
marital satisfaction and marital stability (Gager & Sanchez,
2003; Amato & Hohmann-Marriott, 2007).
Daniel Tadesse’s study (as cited in Girma and Zewdu, 2019) revealed
that in Addis Ababa city within a year (i.e., 2005 to 2006)
6,023 couples were married and among these 1,105 couples were
separated. Additionally, Girma and Zewdu, (2019) reported that the divorce rate in Addis Ababa is increasing by 139% per year.
This highly increasing rate of divorce is not only implied divorce;
it has indistinguishable consequences on individual family members,
particularly on young children. They face multiple challenges
that made them vulnerable to all forms of abuse: physical, emotional
and psychological. On the contrary, children raised in harmonious
and stable families are less likely to have internalized and
externalized behavioral difficulties, perform better in school, are
more likely to get married, and have happy relationships (Amato
& Booth, 1997; Booth & Amato, 2001; Wolfinger, 2011).
No doubt about family is the foundation of a nation, accordingly,
a satisfied and stable marriage relationship has a positive
paramount impact on the well being of the citizens, the economy,
the social interaction, the politics and the overall activities of the
country. Immense literature on marital satisfaction and stability
centers on Western contexts, predominantly the United States of
America and Europe. In recent years, however, there is a growing
interest in marital satisfaction and stability about their different
facets in the Ethiopian context. Specifically, their factors and associations
with sexual satisfaction, marital communication, personality,
premarital expectation and marital conflict were plenty
studied even if the majority of the papers were not published.
But to the best knowledge of the current researcher, no research
is done in this country to study the association between marital
satisfaction and marital stability among married individuals with
a large number of respondents. Therefore, to recommend the
blocking stones of a happy marriage relationship and then a nation
i.e., marital satisfaction and stability, to different stakeholders
this correlational study is designed.
The target population for this study was all heterosexual married
individuals, legally bound by the state of marriage as husband and
wife and who lived in Nifas Silk, Addis Ababa. Nifas Silk Lafto is
one of the 10 sub-cities of Addis Ababa situated in the southwest
district of Addis Ababa and has a total of 12 Wereda administrative
structures. For drawing the samples for the actual research
three Werdas were selected out of the total 12 Weredas of the
sub-city. These were Wereda Two, Four, and Seven. In these three
Woredas, there were 1700 households; out of these households,
326 households were randomly selected. The total households
were obtained from each Werda’s administration office together
with the identification number of the houses. The researcher has
collected data from one of the partners rather than from both of
them to avoid contamination of data. The participants were in
committed marriage relationships for at least six months and no
single-parent or cohabiting spouses were surveyed.
For this study, a two-stage stratified systematic sampling technique along with a simple random sampling technique was employed to
select the study units. First, out of the total 12 Woredas, three
Woredas were selected randomly using the lottery method. Secondly,
from the chosen Woredas, 326, which is computed using
a formula to estimate two population mean, households were selected
systematically. The sampling interval was found to be every
5th house, which was calculated by dividing the sampling frame
(1700) by the required sample size (326). The units (households)
listed in the sampling frame were numbered in a sequence, starting
with one as the first item at the head of the list and continuing
down to the last item according to their physical proximate. To
determine the first Nth (from house numbers one and five) the
lottery method was used (i.e., to identify the first house number).
During data collection, in the case where there was no eligible person
in the selected household, the data collector would go to the
next selected household until he/she got an eligible respondent.
Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale (RDAS) is used as a measure of
marital satisfaction. It is a 14-item revised version of the original
Dyadic Adjustment Scale designed to measure marital satisfaction
(Spanier, 1976). The revised form gives upgraded psychometric
properties and it is shorter, comprises only three of the original
four subscales (Busby, Christensen, Crane, & Larson, 1995). The
RDAS yields a Total Adjustment Score (maximum =69 and minimum
=0). Points on the RDAS range from 0 to 69 with higher
points indicating greater marital satisfaction. Crane, Middleton &
Bean (2000) informed that the RDAS has been found to have
internal consistency reliability of .90.
Marital Status Inventory (MSI) was employed as a measure of
marital stability. The MSI is a 14-item, self-administered, truefalse,
Guttman-type measure that evaluates the dissolution potential
of marital relationships (Weiss & Cerreto, 1980). Points
range from 0 to 14 with higher points indicating greater marriage
instability. In the current study, the MSI points were reversed to
get the direction that would be consistent with that of other variables.
Higher reversed points show higher marital stability and
lower points show lower marital stability.
In this study, the pilot test was mainly conducted to test the internal
reliability of the Amharic version of the standardized scales.
The Amharic version of the instrument was administered to 42
married individuals of which 20 were male and 22 were female.
Participants for the pilot test were selected through convenience
from different target population from which the sample for the
main study was not selected to avoid contamination of information.
As a measure of reliability, the internal consistency of the
items of the Amharic versions scales was examined by computing
Cronbach’s alpha. Cronbach’s alpha provides a measure of the extent to which the items on a scale provide consistent information
about each individual’s level of the trait of interest. Cronbach’s
alpha ranges from 0 to 1.00, with values near to 1.00 showing high
internal consistency.
Table 1. Mean, Standard deviation, and Alpha Coefficients of RDAS and MSI for the Pilot Test (N = 42).
The result of the pilot test from the alpha tests indicates that there was a consistency to the items measuring each construct and all the constructs are deemed acceptable as each of the Alpha value is ranged from 0.82 to .86, which is within the acceptable range of internal consistency for an Alpha reliability of the scales.
Data were screened before performing any statistical analysis. Statistical
Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) window version 22 is
used for analysis. Both descriptive and inferential statistics were
employed. Descriptive statistics namely reliability, mean, standard
deviations, frequency and percentage, and tables were worked out.
Pearson correlation was found out to assess the correlation between
marital satisfaction and stability. Before analyzing to test
the hypothesis, the data were inspected for linearity, normality,
and outliers, and other assumptions. As conventional, a p ≤ .05
will be used to indicate statistical significance.
Making ethical considerations is imperative due to the sensitive
and personal nature of the study. Hereafter, ethical endorsement
and clearance were obtained from the Institutional Review Board
of the School of Psychology, Addis Ababa University. Written
permission was obtained from Nifas Silk Lafto Sub-City Administration
to carry out the study among married individuals who
were living in the sub-city during the study period. The respondents
were made fully aware of the content and purpose of the
research and only willing respondents were incorporated in the
study. Respondents were informed that the information they offer
would be confidential and would not be used other than academic
purposes.
Although 326 questionnaires were distributed to study participants,
308 completed copies of the questionnaires were returned
and made the response rate to be 94.5 %, and all of these were
appropriate for any statistical analysis. Out of the total respondents
in this study, 178 (57.8%) were females and 130 were males (42.2%). The mean average monthly income of the married individuals
was 2829.67 (SD=1482.77) Ethiopian Birr. Regards to the
number of children per married individual, 78(25.3%), 71(23.1%),
68(22.1%), and 66(21.4%) of participants have two, one, three,
and more, and no children, respectively. For the entire survey, the
mean relationship duration was 9.69 years (SD = 8.75) and ranged
from 1 to 35 years. The majority of samples were lived in their
first marriage/union, 275(89.3%). Out of the total number of
the study participants, 256(83.1%) chose their lifelong partners by
themselves or their marriage was a love marriage. All most all of
the study participants twisted married with an individual who has
the same faith/religion as themselves.
In the current study, before testing the hypotheses, variables were
examined for accuracy of data entry, missing values, and fit between
their distributions and the assumptions of univariate, bivariate,
and multivariate statistics, namely outliers, skewness, kurtosis,
normality, and linearity. The overall count of missing values per
variable for a case was less than 10%. Each of the missed data
was replaced by mean imputation systems. About outliers, the researcher
used many techniques to rule out or make corrections
of both univariate and multivariate outliers. To detect univariate
outliers standardized scores (> ±3, considered as outlier score),
kurtosis and skewness were used. In the current data, there were
some outliers. Outliers on the negative side (scores, <-3) were
changed to the nearest lowest non-outlier scores whereas on the
positive side (scores, >+3) the outliers changed to the highest near
points. In the case of multivariate outliers, Cooks' Distance (absolute
values greater than 1 is a cause for concern) and Leverage
(cutoff point, greater than .5 is caused for concerns) were used.
Both univariate and multivariate normality of the continuous independent
and dependent variables were examined. To carry out
this assumption the researcher carried out skewness, kurtosis, histogram,
Q-Q plot charts, and box plots. Using these techniques
the data were found to be not enough to violate the normality
assumption. In addition to the normality of variables, all the relationships
in this study were examined for linearity. Linearity was
assessed by examining the scatter plots of the variables; almost all
the scatter plots followed a linear pattern.
There is a relationship between marital satisfaction and stability.
Table 2. The Association between Marital Satisfaction and Stability using Pearson Correlation among Overall Samples, Females and Males (N=308).
Analysis of the data displayed in Table 2 using Pearson’s correlation indicated that marital satisfaction and stability were significantly and positively correlated among married individuals, r = .68, p < .001. Cross- correlations comparing females’ marital satisfaction and stability were strongly and significantly correlated, r = .74, p < .001. Besides, marital satisfaction and stability were also strongly and positively associated among males, r = .59, p < .001. Therefore, the hypothesis which states that marital satisfaction and stability have a relationship is supported.
Discussion
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between
marital satisfaction and stability among married individuals.
It was predicted that there was a relationship between marital
satisfaction and stability among married individuals. In this study,
marital satisfaction and stability were significantly and positively
correlated among married individuals. The correlation analysis
in the present study also showed that there was a strong association
between females’ marital satisfaction and stability. Similarly,
males’ marital satisfaction was significantly associated with
males’ marital stability. Thus, the hypothesis was fully supported.
The findings of this study are consistent with those of Gager
& Sanchez (2003); Karney & Bradbury (1995); Kurdek (1993);
White & Booth (1991); Amato & Hohmann-Marriott (2007),
which showed that a positive strong relationship exists between
marital satisfaction and marital stability.
Although this study has answered the research questions and
achieved its objective, it was not without limitations. Respondents
might not give genuine answers to the questions they were asked
since this study touches very sensitive and private issues as a result
the self-report measure in the current research faces response
biases and social desirability. Another significant limitation of the
current study is that it is a cross-sectional survey research design.
Cross-sectional research only yields descriptive results. It does not
provide you, like a longitudinal study, to know the reciprocal relationship
between the study variables over time. On account of
this, future investigations on marital stability and marital satisfaction
would benefit from the collection of longitudinal data. The
generalizability of a result is confined to the nature of the study
sample. The current study collected data only from one sub-city
of Addis Ababa and urban married individuals, so additional research
on more diverse samples within Addis Ababa is needed.
Conclusion
The correlation analysis in the present study showed that there
was a strong positive association between married individuals’
marital satisfaction and stability. Moreover, cross-correlation
comparing females’ and males’ marital satisfaction and stability
indicates that there is a strong positive and statistically significant
correlation. In general, the findings have significant implications
in the enhancement of marital satisfaction and stability of married
individuals, prevention of spouses’ conflict and divorce in this study sub-city of Addis Ababa.
Consent for publication
This part is not applicable because the manuscript contains no
person’s data in any form (including individual details, images, or
videos.
Availability of data and material
The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study are
available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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