2018
DOI: 10.1177/0022146518808718
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Healthcare Work in Marriage: How Gay, Lesbian, and Heterosexual Spouses Encourage and Coerce Medical Care

Abstract: Marriage benefits health in part because spouses promote one another’s well-being, yet how spouses facilitate formal healthcare (e.g., doctor’s visits, emergency care) via what we call healthcare work is unknown. Moreover, like other aspects of the marital-health link, healthcare work dynamics likely vary by gender and couple type. To explore this possibility, we use in-depth interviews with 90 midlife gay, lesbian, and heterosexual spouses to examine how spouses perform healthcare work. Our results show that … Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…This study makes significant contributions to the sociology of mental health and mental health care utilization. Our main finding shows that spouses play a significant role in facilitating, promoting, and encouraging engagement with professional mental health care in ways that fit within the broader theoretical construct of “health care work” (Reczek et al 2018); previous research has not articulated health care work dynamics regarding mental health care. Importantly, research on heterosexual men repeatedly shows that men resist seeking help for mental health conditions, yet these studies pay little attention to gender composition of couples and rarely develop theoretical models that include multiple masculinities, such as gay or lesbian masculinity (Addis and Mahalik 2003; Oliffe and Phillips 2008).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…This study makes significant contributions to the sociology of mental health and mental health care utilization. Our main finding shows that spouses play a significant role in facilitating, promoting, and encouraging engagement with professional mental health care in ways that fit within the broader theoretical construct of “health care work” (Reczek et al 2018); previous research has not articulated health care work dynamics regarding mental health care. Importantly, research on heterosexual men repeatedly shows that men resist seeking help for mental health conditions, yet these studies pay little attention to gender composition of couples and rarely develop theoretical models that include multiple masculinities, such as gay or lesbian masculinity (Addis and Mahalik 2003; Oliffe and Phillips 2008).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…In this study, we contribute to research on mental health in marriage by considering how spouses encourage professional mental health care as part of the broader constellation of what is known as health care work (Reczek et al 2018), as well as how these dynamics vary by the gender composition of the couple. We draw on a unique qualitative dyadic data set that allows us to consider each spouse’s perspective on mental health care and relationship dynamics within the couple and provides a comparison of men and women across gay, lesbian, and heterosexual marriages.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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