In the short-term, daily job stressors influence family interactions through their impact on the employed person's mood, thoughts, and coping behaviors. In the long-term, family relationships can be shaped by those experiences in both positive and negative ways. Some spouse 'cross-over' effects appear to represent accommodations of the employed partner under stress-for instance, a spouse's increased provision of social support and involvement with children-and are evidence of dynamics that go beyond a simple and direct transfer of stress from work to home.
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