Validating the Effectiveness of a Gottman Method Couples Therapy Intervention, the Trust Revival Method, for Affair Recovery: A Randomized Control Trial

Research output: Thesis, Dissertation, or CapstoneMaster's Thesis

Abstract

The present study applies a Gottman Method Couples Therapy (GMCT) intervention, the Trust Revival Method (TRM), to couples' relationships following an affair, using a randomized control waitlist design. Couples (n= 84) were recruited nationally and internationally and subsequently randomized to either an immediate treatment group or a 3-week waitlist group. A 6-month post-trial follow-up was conducted for couples that completed treatment. The revised Specific Affect Coding System (Coan & Gottman, 2007) was used to code couples' interactions during a 10–15-minute conflict discussion. Significant effects were found when comparing couples' codes against treatment retention and later relationship functioning. Couples also completed various assessments three times during the study, including the 480-question Gottman Connect (GC) assessment tool. Couples on the 3-week waitlist completed one additional pre-treatment assessment before their 3-week wait commenced. Multivariate statistics with appropriate univariate follow-up procedures were employed to determine group differences between the control and experimental groups. Follow-up procedures were also conducted to investigate any differential rates of symptom reduction or treatment success. The researcher used path analysis procedures following Actor Partner Interdependence Model (APIM- Kenny et al., 2020) assumptions to examine the effects of the intervention on overall relationship satisfaction and subsequent affair recovery, revealing significant effects between assessment scores and coded behaviors. Clinical significance testing also showed significant effects in specific relationship domains. The results add to the current research literature, validating GMCT as an effective broad-based couple therapy approach to repair relationships following infidelity. Implications for clinical practice, graduate training, and research are discussed.
Original languageEnglish
QualificationPh.D.
Awarding Institution
  • Florida Atlantic University
Supervisors/Advisors
  • Peluso, Paul R., Supervisor, External person
  • Emelianchik-Key, Kelly, Committee Member, External person
  • Bowers, Hannah, Committee Member, External person
  • Freund, Robert, Committee Member
Date of AwardAug 1 2022
Place of PublicationUnited States -- Florida
Publisher
Print ISBNs9798841795896
StatePublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Copyright - Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.

Last updated - 2024-02-16

M1 - 29320211

Keywords

  • Affair recovery
  • Gottman method couples therapy
  • Infidelity
  • Trust revival methods
  • Mental health
  • Education
  • Therapy
  • 0212:Therapy
  • 0347:Mental health
  • 0515:Education

Disciplines

  • Psychology

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