Resource Loss and Empathy in Couples During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Role of Attachment Behaviors.

Publication date: Jul 01, 2025

This dyadic, longitudinal study investigates the impact of pandemic-related resource loss on cognitive empathy through actor-partner effects via attachment behaviors in a sample of 535 cisgender heterosexual couples. The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in significant resource loss, disruption to societal functioning and transportation, panic, and isolation. In the wake of mass-stress events, preserving empathy in relationships may aid long-term adaptation; this study represents a contribution toward understanding empathy in couples during mass stress. We tested actor and partner effects of resource loss at the onset of the pandemic on changes in empathy 6 months later. We also examined the mediating role of attachment behavior changes in this relationship. Resource loss indirectly decreased empathy through reduced attachment behaviors for actors. It also indirectly increased empathy in the partner via enhanced partner attachment behaviors. Attachment behaviors supported higher empathy within partners, with no gender differences in model effects. Implications include the importance of reducing loss and enhancing attachment behaviors in couples and maintaining empathy for each other during mass stress events.

Concepts Keywords
Actor Adult
Empathy attachment behaviors
Marital couples
Months COVID
Pandemic COVID-19
Empathy
empathy
Female
Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Longitudinal Studies
loss
Male
Middle Aged
Object Attachment
SARS-CoV-2
Spouses
Stress, Psychological

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 Pandemic
disease IDO role
disease MESH panic
disease IDO object
disease MESH Stress Psychological

Original Article

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