A high-powered replication study finds no effect of starting or stopping hormonal contraceptive use on relationship quality |
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Authors: | Patrick Jern Antti Kärnä Janna Hujanen Tatu Erlin Annika Gunst Helmi Rautaheimo Emilia Öhman S. Craig Roberts Brendan P. Zietsch |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Åbo Akademi University, FIN-20500 Turku, Finland;2. Department of Psychology, University of Turku, FIN-20014 Turku, Finland;3. Independent researcher, Turku, Finland;4. Division of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland, UK;5. School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Sir Fred Schonell Dr., St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia |
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Abstract: | A number of recent studies have implicated that incongruent use of hormonal contraceptives (HCs) negatively affects various aspects of women's romantic relationships. It has been suggested that women with incongruent HC use (a discrepancy in HC use status between when they first met their current partner and the time of study participation) report less sexual satisfaction and higher jealousy scores compared to women with congruent HC use. A similar effect has also been hypothesized for general relationship satisfaction, and recent findings suggest that the association between HC incongruency and women's general relationship satisfaction is moderated by third-party ratings of facial attractiveness of the women's male partners. Using a large convenience sample (N = 948) of Finnish women, we attempted to replicate previously reported findings but found no support for the HC congruency hypothesis, despite excellent statistical power (≥98.7%) to detect previously reported effect sizes. Instead, after dividing our sample into four groups based on HC congruency/incongruency, we found that the largest differences in jealousy, sexual satisfaction, and relationship satisfaction scores tended to be found between women who were consistent HC users and consistent non-users (i.e., between women with different kinds of congruent HC use). We also detected a significant main effect of current HC use on jealousy. We conclude that HC congruency effects reported in previous studies may have spuriously arisen from unequal distributions of current HC users within congruent and incongruent HC user groups. |
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Keywords: | Hormonal contraceptives Relationship satisfaction Jealousy Sexual satisfaction Physical attractiveness |
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