Parental Deployment and Youth in Military Families: Exploring Uncertainty and Ambiguous Loss

Authors
Huebner, A. J. Mancini, J. A. Wilcox, R. M. Grass, S. R. Grass, G. A.
Publication year
2007
Citation Title
Parental deployment and youth in military families: Exploring uncertainty and ambiguous loss.
Journal Name
Family Relations
Journal Volume
56
Issue Number
2
Page Numbers
112-122
DOI
10.1111/j.1741-3729.2007.00445.x
Summary
Military youth whose parent was deployed were recruited from one of several National Military Family Association (NMFA) camps. In this study, youth completed semi-structured interviews regarding uncertainty, loss, resilience, adjustment, and the ambiguity of having a parent deployed. Major response themes that emerged were overall perceptions of uncertainty and loss, boundary ambiguity, concerns about nondeployed parents, and changes in mental health.
Key Findings
Approximately 32% of participants made statements indicative of depressive symptoms. Adolescents reported signs consistent with depression, specifically lost interest in regular activities, isolation, changes in sleeping and eating patterns, sadness, and crying.
Adolescents may stifle their emotions so that they can act as if they are okay, when in fact they are not. One seemingly common reaction to emotional suppression is lashing out.
Thirty-five participants reported that the emotional climate of the family may become more intense during parental deployment.
Implications for Program Leaders
Provide support for youth while integrating a family education component addressing ambiguous loss in families dealing with a family member’s deployment
Offer education about the signs and symptoms of depression to both youth and adults to provide families with greater skills in identifying mental health concerns and seeking help when needed
Offer a component to assist youth in developing communication and self-expression skills to articulate their experiences of ambiguity
Implications for Policy Makers
Recommend training of professionals who serve and work with military families on the physical, cognitive, and emotional development that occurs during adolescence and how parents' deployment can impact normal development
Encourage the use of evidence-based intervention and prevention programs for military youth who live on installations
Promote reintegration programs that include attention to assisting Service members’ family in adjusting to the Service member’s return
Methods
Participants were recruited from NMFA camps from five states: Washington, Hawaii, Texas, Virginia, and Georgia.
Focus groups were conducted with youth whose parent(s) were deployed. Each youth had to provide proof of parental consent in order to be included in the study, and semi-structured focus group interviews lasted about 90 minutes.
Researchers analyzed youth's responses for themes related to what issues might impede adolescent development.
Participants
One hundred seven youth between the ages of 12 and 18 years participated; 54% were males (46% were females).
Racial/ethnic composition of the sample was as follows: 61% White, 17% Black, 10% Biracial, 7% Latino/Latina, 3% Asian-American, and 1% Native American.
Military families represented a number of military components: 39% Army, 23% National Guard (Army and Air Force), 13% Reserves (all branches), 10% Air Force, 4% Marines, and 3% Navy.
Limitations
Individuals who participated may differ from non-participants in a way that is not measured, but affected the outcome variables. For instance, those that participated may have been functioning better (or worse) than those who did not participate.
The focus group format may have created pressure for youth to respond in the “best” way.
Researchers may have assumed the meaning of words or phrases, or they may have overlooked unexpected findings.
Avenues for Future Research
Replicate this study in a larger, more demographically diverse sample
Investigate the impact of ambiguous loss by using more comprehensive and more objective measures of academic performance, as compared to self-report measures
Gather data from military youth during each stage of the deployment cycle to determine if the impacts on their development differ during each stage of their parents' deployment
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
Target Population
Population Focus
Military Component
Abstract
Parental deployment has substantial effects on the family system, among them ambiguity and uncertainty. Youth in military families are especially affected by parental deployment because their coping repertoire is only just developing; the requirements of deployment become additive to normal adolescent developmental demands. Focus groups were used to inquire about uncertainty, loss, resilience, and adjustment among youth aged 12–18 that had a parent deployed, most often to a war zone. The nature of uncertainty and ambiguous loss was explored. Response themes included overall perceptions of uncertainty and loss, boundary ambiguity, changes in mental health, and relationship conflict. These accounts suggest that ambiguous loss is a useful concept for understanding the experiences of these youth and for structuring prevention and intervention efforts.
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