Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Study Finds Divorce Runs In Families And Could Be Genetic

06 Oct, 2017 04:38 PM
    According to a recent study, Children of divorced parents are more likely to get separated when compared to those who grew up in two-parent families, and genetic factors may be to blame
     
    It had been assumed that this may have been down to environmental factors, and the normalisation of divorce to a developing child.
     
    But a new study found that the link does not exist for adopted children, meaning there's a possibility that the likelihood of divorce is genetic.
     
    The study could have implications for how marriage counsellors offer advice to couples whose relationships are on the rocks.
     
    "We were trying to answer the basic question: Why does divorce run in families? At present, the bulk of evidence on why divorce runs in families points to the idea that growing up with divorced parents weakens your commitment to and the interpersonal skills needed for marriage," said study's author Dr Jessica Salvatore.
     
     
    Adding, "So, if a distressed couple shows up in a therapist's office and finds, as part of learning about the partners' family histories, that one partner comes from a divorced family, then the therapist may make boosting commitment or strengthening interpersonal skills a focus of their clinical efforts."
     
    According to the researchers, the study's findings are significant because they diverge from the predominantly found narrative in divorce literature, which suggests that offspring of divorced parents are more likely to get divorced themselves because they see their parents lacking in commitment or struggling to manage conflict.
     
    As such, this literature suggests that children grow up to internalize that behavior and exhibit it in their own relationships.
     
    Instead, Dr Salvatore suggests, more time should be spent exploring basic personality traits which have been previously linked to divorce, such as high levels of negativity and low levels of constraint.
     
    The study material was provided by Virginia Commonwealth University. 

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Surgeon Awarded Prestigious Award

    Indian-Origin Surgeon Awarded Prestigious Award
    An Indian-origin British orthopaedic surgeon has been awarded the prestigious 'Hunterian Professorship' by the Royal College of Surgeons of England for his research on stem cells in articular cartilage repair.

    Indian-Origin Surgeon Awarded Prestigious Award

    Scrapped Indian Notes Sail To Dubai To End Up As Furniture

    Scrapped Indian Notes Sail To Dubai To End Up As Furniture
    After demonetisation, Indias invalid Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes are now on their way to Dubai and may end up in your living room as a piece of furniture or a photo frame, says a report in Gulf News.

    Scrapped Indian Notes Sail To Dubai To End Up As Furniture

    Wonder Woman Dumped As A Special UN Ambassador After Uproar

    Wonder Woman Dumped As A Special UN Ambassador After Uproar
    Comic Book Heroine Wonder Woman Has Been Abruptly Fired From Her Honorary Ambassador Job At The United Nations

    Wonder Woman Dumped As A Special UN Ambassador After Uproar

    WATCH: Electronics Store Employees Pitch In To Buy Nintendo For Boy

    WATCH: Electronics Store Employees Pitch In To Buy Nintendo For Boy
    Employees at a New York electronics store have come together to buy a Nintendo system for a boy who frequently plays video games there.

    WATCH: Electronics Store Employees Pitch In To Buy Nintendo For Boy

    Hair Wash At Barber's Caused A Clot. He's Been Awarded 90,000 Pounds

    Hair Wash At Barber's Caused A Clot. He's Been Awarded 90,000 Pounds
    A British man who suffered a stroke because an artery was damaged during a routine haircut has reportedly received 90,000 pounds in compensation from the salon.

    Hair Wash At Barber's Caused A Clot. He's Been Awarded 90,000 Pounds

    Rachel Notley Defends Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Amid Renewed Calls For His Resignation

    Rachel Notley Defends Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Amid Renewed Calls For His Resignation
    EDMONTON — Alberta's opposition parties are renewing calls for the human services minister to be fired over the death of a child in care, but Premier Rachel Notley says they're just playing politics.

    Rachel Notley Defends Human Services Minister Irfan Sabir Amid Renewed Calls For His Resignation