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Frontline Love: Romantic Partners of Frontline Doctors and Nurses During the New York City COVID‐19 Outbreak

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY(2022)

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Abstract
Abstract Objective This qualitative study's aim was to learn how the spouses and romantic partners of frontline doctors and nurses dealt with the acute stress of the outbreak; the kinds of support they provided when the frontliners had to navigate COVID‐19 at their hospitals; and, according to their perceptions, how this crisis impacted their relationship. Background This study focused on the partners of frontliners working in hospitals during the crisis of the coronavirus outbreak in New York City (NYC)—one of the earliest epicenters of the COVID‐19 pandemic in the United States. This study expanded upon the Family Stress Model—which examines how economic problems can affect marital quality and stability. Method Interviews were conducted with 29 partners of frontliners who had been treating COVID‐19 patients in NYC hospitals during the pandemic outbreak from February 29 to June 1, 2020. Partners were recruited via snowball sampling, interviewed via Zoom or telephone, and results were analyzed using thematic content analysis. Results The following themes were found in the narratives: The burden of running the home independently; providing various kinds of support (concrete, emotional, and refraining from sexual and physical closeness); and the effects of the pandemic on the relationship via writing a will and discussing the possibility of death, the lack of relationship‐ending threats, and emerging from the crisis with a strengthened relationship. Conclusion The pandemic crisis unified the partners and frontliners, even in the face of multiple stressors.
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