Typical stressful emotions for wartime military wives have not changed since the Vietnam War. Given the catastrophic nature of the Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) war of the 21st century, growing concerns have emerged from the public regarding this population’s psychological and physical health. A qualitative phenomenological analysis explored an in-depth OIF deployment separation on eight military wives’ psychological, physical, and spiritual well-being with soldier-husbands’ indefi nite deployment. From the dominant thematic fi ndings emerged an overall experience for this population, named a “survivalrecovery effect.” Results strikingly mirrored previous empirical research that confi rmed the military wives have been unprepared to manage war-induced deployment separations. Implications suggested a critical need to develop intervention support services and programs aimed at addressing the unique wartime stressors for this population. Insights from these women have the potential to guide future military wives through a wartime crisis. Findings have wide benefi ts for the military wife population vital to soldier retention, segments of the military and civilian scientific communities, and the fi eld of psychology. Future recommendations and limitations are outlined.
Survival-Recovery Effect: Military Wives With Soldier-Husbands Deployed to the Operation Iraqi Freedom Conflict.
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Citation
Chambers, J. E. (2013). Survival-Recovery Effect: Military Wives With Soldier-Husbands Deployed to the Operation Iraqi Freedom Conflict.. Journal of Psychological Issues in Organizational Culture, 4, 29-49. doi:10.1002/jpoc.21088