Extradyadic Sex and Psychological Distress among Married and Cohabiting Young Adults: An Examination of Internalized and Externalized Responses

Citation

Wenger, Marin R. & Frisco, Michelle L. (2020). Extradyadic Sex and Psychological Distress among Married and Cohabiting Young Adults: An Examination of Internalized and Externalized Responses. Journal of Family Issues. , PMCID: PMC8360392

Abstract

Extradyadic sex (EDS) is a major relationship violation, yet it occurs in nearly a quarter of United States cohabiting and marital unions. While many relationships dissolve in the wake of EDS, a majority remain intact. Theories of social stress suggest that substantial psychological distress should result unless EDS is a symptom of stress caused by involvement in a relationship marked by other negative characteristics. This study investigates how one’s own EDS, a partner’s EDS, and mutual EDS are related to internalizing and externalizing behaviors: depressive symptoms and heavy alcohol use, respectively. Analyses of data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health suggest that one’s own EDS is associated with heavy alcohol use among cohabiters and spouses and with depressive symptoms among spouses, while partner EDS has no association with either outcome, net of confounders. We discuss the implications of these findings in the study’s conclusions.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1177/0192513x20927766

Keyword(s)

extradyadic sex

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Family Issues

Author(s)

Wenger, Marin R.
Frisco, Michelle L.

Year Published

2020

DOI

10.1177/0192513x20927766

PMCID

PMC8360392

Reference ID

6462