Parenting Practices and Emotion Regulation in National Guard and Reserve Families: Early Findings From the After Deployment Adaptive Parenting Tools/ADAPT Study

Type
Summary

Exposure of one parent to combat, reintegration, and further deployment is hypothesized to impair parenting by influencing parents' emotion regulation capacities. Baseline data were collected from National Guard/Reserve and civilian parents and families participating in the After Deployment: Adaptive Parenting Tool (ADAPT) program. Results indicate that deployed parents reported more difficulty with emotional regulation and parenting than civilian parents, particularly deployed mothers.

Citation
Gewirtz, A., Davis, L. (2014). Parenting Practices and Emotion Regulation in National Guard and Reserve Families: Early Findings From the After Deployment Adaptive Parenting Tools/ADAPT Study. 111-131. doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-8712-8_7