Assessing Military Community Support: Relations Among Perceived Military Community Support, Child Psychosocial Adjustment, and Parent Psychosocial Adjustment

Authors
Conforte, A. M. Bakalar, J. L. Shank, L. M. Quinlan, J. Stephens, M. B. Sbrocco, T. Tanofsky-Kraff, M.
Publication year
2017
Citation Title
Assessing military community support: Relations among perceived military community support, child psychosocial adjustment, and parent psychosocial adjustment.
Journal Name
Military Medicine
Journal Volume
182
Issue Number
9/10
Page Numbers
e1871-e1878
DOI
10.7205/MILMED-D-17-00016
Summary
Military families often experience additional stress due to the military life style, and community support is an important factor that can reduce stress. This study had 198 primary caregivers in military families complete an online survey regarding their psychosocial functioning, perceived community support, and their child's psychosocial functioning. Results indicated that perceived community support played an important role in both military parents' and children's well-being.
Key Findings
Perceived military community support was positively associated with both parents' and children's psychosocial functioning.
The more community support parents perceived, the more likely that they had positive psychosocial functioning, which in turn was associated with children's positive psychosocial functioning.
Parental psychosocial functioning and perceived community support explained 24% of children's psychosocial functioning.
Implications for Program Leaders
Disseminate information on military bases regarding available community resources and support for military families with children
Engage military parents in workshops that focus on promoting their psychosocial functioning and parenting skills
Help military families find community support when they encounter stressors associated with the military life style
Implications for Policy Makers
Raise awareness on military bases regarding the importance of community support on military families' well-being
Encourage the development of community support programs to promote the psychosocial functioning of parents and children
Recommend education of professionals who work with military families on the positive association between community support and military families' well-being
Methods
Participants were recruited through flyers, social media, and email.
Participants completed an online survey; measures included parents' and children's psychosocial symptoms and parents' perceived community support.
Data were analyzed to examine the associations between child psychosocial adjustment, parent psychosocial adjustment, and perceived community support.
Participants
Participants were 198 Active Duty Service members or other primary caregivers in military families (82% female); each participant had at least one child who was between six and 18 years old.
The average age of the participants was 34.06 years (SD = 6.18) and most of them were White (86%); the race/ethnicity of the other 14% was not reported.
The military branches of the Service members were Army (36%), Navy (29%), Air Force (24%), and Marine Corps (11%).
Limitations
The sample was relatively homegenous (mostly female and White), which limited the generalizability of the study.
The cross-sectional design of the study made it impossible to examine the causal relationship between community support and psychosocial functioning.
The study was mainly based on self-report data, so the results may be subject to social-desirability bias and memory bias.
Avenues for Future Research
Recruit more male and non-White participants so that the sample is more representative
Conduct longitudinal studies to examine the causal relationship between community support and military parents' and children's well-being
Use both subjective and objective data so that the findings are more reliable
Design Rating
2 Stars - There are some flaws in the study design or research sample, but those flaws do not significantly threaten the ability to make conclusions based on the data.
Methods Rating
2 Stars - There are no significant biases or deficits in the way the variables in the study are defined or measures and conclusions are appropriately drawn from the analyses performed.
Limitations Rating
2 Stars - There are a few factors that limit the ability to extend the results to an entire population, but the results can be extended to most of the population.
Focus
Multiple Branches
Population Focus
Military Branch
Military Component
Abstract
The emotional, cognitive, and behavioral health of the nearly two million children of military service members in the United States is important as these children play an integral role in the operational readiness of the armed forces. For example, when a service member's child experiences psychosocial difficulties, these difficulties often impact the service member's personal well-being and ability to focus at work, impairing the service member's ability to focus on the mission. Although military service members and their families (e.g., children and spouses) face many of the same stressors as their civilian counterparts, they also experience additional stressors related to being a military family, including frequent relocation, unpredictable schedule changes, short- and long-term family separation, and threats to service members' safety. Psychosocial functioning and resilience to stress may be influenced by a variety of factors. One important factor that influences parent and child functioning is community support. Community support may be especially important for military families because of the increased significance of social support during stress such as deployment and geographic relocation. Research is promising regarding the protective effects of community support in civilian populations. However, there is a comparable dearth in the literature regarding military families and no validated measures designed specifically to assess the construct of community support in military families. We therefore aimed to develop and examine a new measure, the Community Assessment of Military Perceived Support (CAMPS) and examine its potential relationship with the psychosocial functioning of military parents and their children. The CAMPS was developed and initially tested with both quantitative and qualitative methods. The CAMPS was then used to examine the relationships among perceived community support and child/parent psychosocial symptoms. This cross-sectional correlational study was conducted in a sample of military parents with children between the ages of 2 and 18 years of age who completed an online, anonymous survey. One hundred and fifty-seven military parents completed the CAMPS. Internal consistency was excellent (α = 0.94). More community support as measured by the CAMPS was associated with fewer child and parent psychosocial symptoms (p < 0.01) and the relationship between perceived military community support and child well-being was mediated by parent well-being (95% confidence interval [−0.19, −0.04]). Together, parent psychosocial functioning and perceived military community support explained 24% of the variance in child psychosocial functioning. The CAMPS is an internally consistent measure that appears to be associated with military parent and child psychosocial functioning. Given the importance of military community support, the CAMPS may have potential as a tool for outcome research and program evaluation. Future research is required to validate the CAMPS in a larger, more diverse military sample. Moreover, longitudinal studies are needed to determine the directionality of the relationship between community military support and psychosocial functioning.
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