Not exact matches
The person or people at fault for injuring you may
be required to pay for your past and future medical expenses, the time you lose at work, your motorcycle or any other property that
was damaged, the cost of hiring someone to do your household chores during the period when you can't do them (estimated through your lifetime, if you suffer a catastrophic injury), permanent disfigurement, loss of enjoyment, emotional
distress and the adverse impact on your
spouse, and any change
in your future earning ability.
242, 765 P. 2d 811 (1988)(distinguishing between alienation of affections and intentional infliction of emotional
distress as a distinction between the loss suffered;
in the former, the loss complained of
is the loss of affection of the
spouse;
in the latter, the loss
is emotional
distress as a result of the intentional act of causing a loss of affection).
A wrongful death claim typically belongs to a surviving
spouse or minor children or a deceased person's heirs if there
is no surviving
spouse nor minor children, and it enables them to recover for future benefits including lost wages, medical and funeral expenses, loss of comfort, society and companionship, emotional
distress and
in rare instances, punitive damages.
Distressed that arbitration
is not a viable alternative to
spouses who can not afford to pay an arbitrator and holding that the approval of the arbitration process by a family court constitutes an improper delegation of its constitutional responsibility, the Kentucky Court of Appeals recently barred arbitration
in divorce cases.
People whose marriages
are in distress often feel as though they spend all of their time either fighting with or
being quietly angry at their
spouse.
Marital
distress can also occur if the
distressed partner
s behavior triggers negative effects
in the
spouse.
This person, who
was obviously
in distress around a family law matter and possibly even dealing with domestic violence,
was exhibiting a habit I see often with my clients: Talking to a
spouse or partner directly becomes so emotionally difficult, they start using text messages as their main source of communication.
It can help us trust that a reliable and consistent caregiver (like our
spouse) will
be there for us
in our times of
distress — the very opposite of what we may have learned
in childhood.
I get adults
in unhappy marriages that ask if anything will change if their
spouse refuses to attend, teens who manifest symptoms so that they can enter therapy only to tell me that it
is their relationship with family that
is causing them
distress.
Couples
in which
spouses report caregiving - related health problems may
be at particular high risk of long - term elevated
distress.
Multilevel modeling of data from 158 couples revealed that baseline
spouses» reports of caregiving - related health problems
were significantly associated with 3 - month (p < 0.001) and 6 - month (p = 0.01) follow - up
distress in both patients and
spouses even when controlling for baseline
distress and dyadic adjustment.
These findings
are consistent with previous research,
in which caregiving burden among
spouses of patients with lung cancer
was related to 3 - and 6 - month follow - up
distress in spouses.
The influence of social and relationship factors have
been explored using a number of research questions and methodologies, and
in Western cultures results indicate that those with a family member or
spouse who have
been experiencing depression express feelings of burden, stress, and mental
distress themselves (see Rehman, Gollan, & Mortimer, 2008 for a review).
Those
in therapy learn to deal not only with their individual
distress, but also how relationships with God,
spouse, family and friends
are interrelated to the problem.
Causal attributions (i.e., locus, stability, globality) and responsibility attributions (i.e., bad intent, selfish motivation, blame)
were assessed
in the
spouses of 27 depressed psychiatric inpatients and 30 nondepressed dyads to test predictions derived from Hooley's (1987) «symptom - controllability» model of marital
distress.
Often,
spouses or parents feel helpless
in the face of their loved one's
distress, feel badly for
being helpless,
are forced to find some way to cope with their own distressful responses, and can
be relieved by the thought of their loved one having a problem that can
be «fixed» by a professional.
Extensive data
were collected on mothers» demographic characteristics, health history, including maternal history of asthma, prenatal and postnatal maternal psychological
distress (anxiety, depression or stress), maternal social support (specifically the extent of partner /
spouse support) and children's birth and health outcomes including breastfeeding status (at 3 months) from the APrON surveys completed at prenatal or postnatal clinic visits or sent
in by mail.
When your marriage or relationship
is in distress, you and your
spouse or partner may
be stuck
in habitual patterns that reinforce your worst fears, and can even take on a life of their own.
Distressed spouses are more likely to respond aversively
in turn, while also becoming more sensitive to those behaviors.
In a recent trial court opinion issued by the Superior Court in Hudson County, Judge Gallipoli recognized that parents in NJ may have a right to collect damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress when their relationships with their children are poisoned by former spouses or even grandparents who partake in alienating behavior
In a recent trial court opinion issued by the Superior Court
in Hudson County, Judge Gallipoli recognized that parents in NJ may have a right to collect damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress when their relationships with their children are poisoned by former spouses or even grandparents who partake in alienating behavior
in Hudson County, Judge Gallipoli recognized that parents
in NJ may have a right to collect damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress when their relationships with their children are poisoned by former spouses or even grandparents who partake in alienating behavior
in NJ may have a right to collect damages for intentional infliction of emotional
distress when their relationships with their children
are poisoned by former
spouses or even grandparents who partake
in alienating behavior
in alienating behaviors.