2014
DOI: 10.1037/a0036235
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Family adjustment of deployed and nondeployed mothers in families with a parent deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan.

Abstract: Almost nothing is known about the family and individual adjustment of military mothers who have deployed to the conflicts in Iraq or Afghanistan (Operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom, and Operation New Dawn; OIF, OEF, OND), constituting a gap in psychologists’ knowledge about how best to help this population. We report baseline data on maternal, child, parenting, and couple adjustment for mothers in 181 families in which a parent deployed to OIF/OEF/OND. Among this sample, 34 mothers had deployed at least onc… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…Overall, more frequent and lengthier deployments appear to be associated with greater levels of parent stress and depressive symptoms (Barker & Berry, 2009;Chartrand et al, 2008;Gewirtz et al, 2014a), poorer family or couple functioning (Allen et al, 2011;Cozza et al, 2010;Gewirtz et al, 2010), poorer general wellbeing Everson et al, 2013), and greater use of mental health services for the military spouse (Larson et al, 2012). Mental health problems were particularly high among military spouses raising young children alone during deployment periods (Barker & Berry, 2009).…”
Section: Parent Mental Healthmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Overall, more frequent and lengthier deployments appear to be associated with greater levels of parent stress and depressive symptoms (Barker & Berry, 2009;Chartrand et al, 2008;Gewirtz et al, 2014a), poorer family or couple functioning (Allen et al, 2011;Cozza et al, 2010;Gewirtz et al, 2010), poorer general wellbeing Everson et al, 2013), and greater use of mental health services for the military spouse (Larson et al, 2012). Mental health problems were particularly high among military spouses raising young children alone during deployment periods (Barker & Berry, 2009).…”
Section: Parent Mental Healthmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Nine studies examined the associations between deployment and indicators of parent distress, family functioning, and spouses' health care utilization (Allen et al, 2011;Chartrand et al, 2008;Cozza et al, 2010;Everson et al, 2013;Flake et al, 2009;Gewirtz et al, 2010Gewirtz et al, , 2014aLarson et al, 2012;Wilson et al, 2014). Overall, more frequent and lengthier deployments appear to be associated with greater levels of parent stress and depressive symptoms (Barker & Berry, 2009;Chartrand et al, 2008;Gewirtz et al, 2014a), poorer family or couple functioning (Allen et al, 2011;Cozza et al, 2010;Gewirtz et al, 2010), poorer general wellbeing Everson et al, 2013), and greater use of mental health services for the military spouse (Larson et al, 2012).…”
Section: Parent Mental Healthmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Behavioural changes in children due to separation can translate into anxiety and depressive symptomatology in mothers via concerns for their child's wellbeing (Mofrad et al, 2009;Kaitz et al, 2010). This may explain the elevated levels of parenting stress and sensitivity to offspring observed amongst US deployed mothers (Kelly Herzog-Simmer & Harris, 1994), in addition to greater distress, PTSD and depression, compared to those who were not deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan (Gewirtz et al, 2014).…”
Section: Deployment-related Stressmentioning
confidence: 95%