Front Psychol. 2025 Dec 4;16:1657068. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1657068. eCollection 2025.
ABSTRACT
Elevated symptoms of depression and anxiety are common after the onset of cardiovascular disease in both patients and their spouses. Attachment anxiety, attachment avoidance, and the degree to which couples cope jointly with the stress of cardiovascular disease may help to explain why some of them experience worsening psychological distress. The aim of this study was to investigate the link between insecure attachment and the mental health of patients with cardiovascular disease and their spouses, along with the potential mediating role of common dyadic coping (CDC). Patients with cardiovascular disease and their spouses completed validated questionnaires measuring romantic attachment, common dyadic coping, depression, and anxiety. A structural equation modeling framework was used to test an actor-partner interdependence mediation model. Patients' and spouses' (N = 181 couples; M age = 63.15 years; 79% male patients) romantic attachment anxiety was related to their own symptoms of depression and anxiety; the more attachment anxiety they reported, the higher their scores on measures of depression and anxiety were. Patients' and spouses' romantic attachment avoidance was related to their own and their spouses' common dyadic coping, with greater avoidance linked to less common dyadic coping for both. There was no significant relation between common dyadic coping and romantic partners' mental health. The results suggest that romantic attachment anxiety is related to psychological distress in couples facing cardiovascular disease, and that attachment avoidance is related to low levels of common dyadic coping. Consideration of attachment orientations may be important in the treatment of anxiety and depression among patients and their spouses.
PMID:41426397 | PMC:PMC12713419 | DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1657068