1. ChatGPT ‘upgrade’ giving more harmful answers than previously, tests find
Robert Booth, UK technology editor
2. Boys Need Stories, Too
|By Elizabeth Grace Matthew
3. DC government can do a lot to make families stronger
Delano Squires, opinion contributor
4. Fewer than half of UK adults are married
Harry Benson
5. The American Dream Lecture Series: Anastasia Berg on Children and the Goodness of Human Life (replay)
With Timothy P. Carney | Christopher J. Scalia
6. Dyadic Relationship and Coparenting Quality During the Transition to Parenthood for Couples With Childhood Maltreatment History
7. Five Tips for Nurturing Your Children’s Values
By Eugene C. Roehlkepartain
8. Senate passes Cutrona’s ‘success sequence’ legislation
9. Getting divorced? Chances are you'll marry again, Pew says
By Cara Tabachnick
10. Strengthening military and veteran couple relationships: A rapid view of the effectiveness of relationship education for military couples (Abstract)
Jody Hughes, Luke B. Gahan, Jessica Smart, Lakshmi Neelakantan
Key points
- Military and veteran couples face unique relationship challenges due to factors like relocations, deployments, and transitions out of service.
- Couple Relationship Education (CRE) programmes can improve relationship satisfaction, communication, and stability for military and veteran couples.
- Studies show small to moderate positive effects from CRE, especially for couples with higher initial risk or distress.
- Flexible CRE delivery formats, such as online or hybrid models, are valued and effective for military couples.
- More research and local adaptation of CRE programmes are needed outside the USA to ensure relevance and effectiveness.