Binge watching, quality of sleep and relationship satisfaction in married working and non-working women

Abstract
The current study investigated the relationship between binge watching, quality of sleep and relationship satisfaction in married working and non-working women. It was hypothesized that there was significant relationship between binge watching, quality of sleep and relationship satisfaction. Further, it was hypothesized that binge watching likely to be negative predictor whereas quality of sleep would likely to be positive predictor of relationship satisfaction. A purposive sample of 260 women from homes and different working institutions in Lahore with age range 25-50 years (M =36.81; SD = 7.08) were recruited. Urdu translated versions of Binge Watching Engagement Symptoms Questionnaire (Maèva et al., 2019), PROMIS - Sleep Disturbance Scale (Buysee et al., 2011) and Relationship Satisfaction Scale (Burn, 1993) were used. The results showed that binge watching was negatively correlated while quality of sleep was positively correlated with relationship satisfaction. Further, binge watching was negative predictor of relationship satisfaction whereas quality of sleep was found to be positive predictor of relationship satisfaction. The study's findings can assist psychologists and counselors in developing appropriate preventative approaches for clients by addressing binge watching and sleep quality as psychological issues associated to relationship satisfaction.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections