# Gendered Dyadic Coping and Marital Satisfaction Among Chinese Couples Navigating Mild Cognitive Impairment

**Authors:** Dexia Kong

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2854 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how couples in Hong Kong manage mild cognitive impairment and how their coping strategies affect marital satisfaction differently based on gender and traditional beliefs.

## Contribution

The study reveals how Confucian traditions and gender ideologies shape dyadic coping and marital satisfaction in non-Western contexts.

## Key findings

- Wives' dyadic coping is linked to their own marital satisfaction, but husbands' is not.
- Egalitarian wives with MCI benefit from traditionalist husbands' dyadic coping, while traditionalist husbands with MCI reduce egalitarian wives' satisfaction.
- Dyadic coping improves satisfaction when the person with MCI holds more traditional views than their spouse.

## Abstract

This study investigates how dyadic coping (i.e., couples’ joint efforts to manage life stressors) interacts with gender and gender ideologies to influence marital satisfaction among couples living with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in Hong Kong.

Using cross-sectional data from 202 couples living with MCI, we applied actor–partner interdependence moderation models to examine interactions between dyadic coping, ideological (dis)similarity, and the gender of the spouse with MCI.

Our results reveal significant gendered asymmetries. The wife’s dyadic coping was related to her own marital satisfaction, while the husband’s dyadic coping was not. Dyadic (dis)similarity in gender ideologies matters: Egalitarian wives with MCI reported higher marital satisfaction when their traditionalist husbands engaged in dyadic coping, whereas dyadic coping of traditionalist husbands with MCI diminished their egalitarian wives’ marital satisfaction. Two-way interactions demonstrated that when persons with MCI endorse more traditional ideologies than their spouses, their dyadic coping enhanced their own satisfaction, regardless of gender.

Dyadic (dis)similarity in gender ideologies and gender combinations of MCI-affected couples intersect to shape the dyadic coping-marital satisfaction link. The positive relational impact of dyadic coping is contingent upon deeply rooted Confucian traditions. Reconciling the gap between collaborative practices and patriarchal norms has the potential to mitigate the gendered imbalance in spousal care. The findings provide valuable insights into the development of culturally sensitive dyadic interventions to promote relational outcomes among couples navigating health challenges beyond MCI. The findings extend dyadic health theory and research in a non-Western context.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760815