Relational Turbulence Among Military Couples After Reunion Following Deployment

Type
Summary

Reintegration following deployment is a pivotal time for returning service members and at-home partners. We test logic
derived from the relational turbulence model about depressive symptoms, relational uncertainty, and interference from a
partner as predictors of people’s appraisals of turmoil during the post-deployment transition. Participants were 118
military couples who completed an online questionnaire once per month for the first 3 months after homecoming.
Multilevel models predicting people’s appraisals of turmoil revealed (a) actor and partner effects of depressive
symptoms, (b) actor effects of relational uncertainty, and (c) actor effects of interference from a partner that were
apparent beyond people’s appraisals of turmoil during the previous month. These findings advance both theory and
practice.

Citation
Knobloch, L. K., McAninch, K. G., Abendschein, B., Ebata, A. T., Mcglaughlin, P. C. (2016). Relational Turbulence Among Military Couples After Reunion Following Deployment. Personal Relationship, 23, 742-748. doi:10.1111/pere.12148