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Integrating Home and School Identities of Recent-immigrant Hispanic English Language Learners through Classroom Practices
The negotiation of integrated home and school identities of 3 second grade Hispanic English language learners (ELLs) included in an English–dominant classroom are explored through sociocultural paradigms, wi
Bringing the War Back Home: Mental Health Disorders among 103,788 U.S. Veterans Returning from Iraq and Afghanistan Seen at Department of Veterans Affairs Facilities
Challenges and Stressors of African American Armed Service Personnel and their Families
African American armed service personnel and their families bear great burden in times of war in their effort to protect and secure the nation's civil liberties and freedoms.
Stigma and the Military: Evaluation of a PTSD Psychoeducational Program
Trauma risk management (TRiM) is an intensive posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) psychoeducational management strategy based on peer-group risk assessment developed by the UK Royal Navy (RN).
The Case Against Corporal Punishment of Children: Converging Evidence from Social Science Research and International Human Rights Law and Implication for U.S. Public Policy
Although support for corporal punishment of children remains widespread in the United States, there is a substantial body of research from psychology and its allied disciplines indicating corporal punishment
Characteristics of Callers to the Domestic Abuse Hotline for Men
Male victims of interpersonal violence are often unrecognized because of certain views that interpersonal violence includes a power structure in society that favors males.
Characteristics of Callers to the Domestic Abuse Hotline for Men
Intimate partner violence (IPV) by women against men has been the subject of much debate. Feminists typically argue that IPV is committed only by men against women. Others argue that violence is a human problem and women also commit much IPV.
A Profile of Grandparents Raising Grandchildren as a Result of Parental Military Deployment
This descriptive study examines how military deployments affect custodial grandparents who are appointed to care for grandchildren during this parental absence. Participants were recruited through pre-existing support groups in community agencies located near military installations.
A Profile of Grandparents Raising Grandchildren as a Result of Parental Military Deployment
There is a growing number of grandparents faced with the need to raise their grandchildren as a result of the military deployment of their own child. This is a descriptive study that examines the experiences of 23 grandmothers who are providing full time child care to their grandchildren.
Bringing the War Back Home: Mental Health Disorders Among 103,788 US Veterans Returning From Iraq and Afghanistan Seen at Department of Veterans Affairs Facilities
It is important to understand mental health concerns among OEF/OIF Veterans in order for the Veterans Affairs (VA) department to better treat these individuals.
Bringing the War Back Home: Mental Health Disorders Among 103,788 US Veterans Returning From Iraq and Afghanistan Seen at Department of Veterans Affairs Facilities
Background Veterans of Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF) have endured high combat stress and are eligible for two years of free military service–related health care through the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system, yet little is known about the burden and c
Anger, Hostility, and Aggression among Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans Reporting PTSD and Subthreshold PTSD
Iraq and Afghanistan War veterans were grouped by level of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptomatology and compared on self-report meas
Child Maltreatment in Enlisted Soldiers' Families During Combat-Related Deployments
It is important to understand the relationship between deployment and child maltreatment in order to provide the best programs for prevention and intervention.
Child Maltreatment in Enlisted Soldiers' Families During Combat-Related Deployments
Parental stress is believed to play a critical role in child maltreatment, and deployment is often stressful for military families.
Perceived Stress, Heart Rate, and Blood Pressure among Adolescents with Family Members Deployed in Operation Iraqi Freedom
This exploratory study compares perceived stress, loss of psychosocial resources, PTSD symptoms and physiological measures (heart rate, blood pressure) among adolescents who had a family member deployed to Operation Iraqi Freedom to both civilian peers and military peers with a nondeployed parent
Tobacco Use and Perceived Financial Strain Among Junior Enlisted in the U.S. Military in 2002
Objective. The detrimental health effects of tobacco use have long been documented and accepted. Recent research has begun to explore the financial strain that tobacco places on those who use it e.g. Mokdad, A.H., Marks, J.S., Stroup, D.F., Gerberding, J.L., 2004.
Timing of Postcombat Mental Health Assessments
Timing of Postcombat Mental Health Assessments
When soldiers return from combat and peacekeeping operations, the United States and many NATO and Partnership for Peace countries conduct some form of postdeployment mental health assessment.
Intentional Self-Regulation and Positive Youth Development in Early Adolescence: Findings From the 4-H Study of Positive Youth Development
Fifth graders participated in a study designed to examine the development of intentional self-regulation which is defined as selecting and enacting behaviors that attain goals that are pertinent to oneself.
Intentional Self-Regulation and Positive Youth Development in Early Adolescence: Findings From the 4-H Study of Positive Youth Development
In this research, the authors examined the development of intentional self-regulation in early adolescence, which was operationalized through the use of a measure derived from the model of selection, optimization, and compensation (SOC).
Helping Children Cope when a Loved One is on Military Deployment
Americans read the big, bold newspaper headlines: “U.S.
New Onset and Persistent Symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Self Reported After Deployment and Combat Exposures: Prospective Population Based U.S. Military Cohort
Baseline and three-year follow-up data from Service members from all branches of the military were used to describe new onset and persistence of self-reported posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in a large, population-based military cohort.
New Onset and Persistent Symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Self Reported After Deployment and Combat Exposures: Prospective Population Based U.S. Military Cohort
To describe new onset and persistence of self-reported post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms in a large population based military cohort, many of whom were deployed in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Design: Prospective cohort analysis.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Service Utilization in a Sample of Service Members from Iraq and Afghanistan
Veterans participated in a study examining how posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and alcohol abuse impact quality of life and mental health utilization. PTSD, and to a lesser degree depression, were associated with lower quality of life in multiple domains.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Service Utilization in a Sample of Service Members from Iraq and Afghanistan
Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate levels of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, alcohol abuse, quality of life, and mental health service utilization among returnees from Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Parental Deployment and Youth in Military Families: Exploring Uncertainty and Ambiguous Loss
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.
Parental Deployment and Youth in Military Families: Exploring Uncertainty and Ambiguous Loss
Parental deployment has substantial effects on the family system, among them ambiguity and uncertainty.
Mental Health of U.S. Gulf War Veterans 10 Years after the War
Background Gulf War veterans reported multiple psychological symptoms immediately after the war; the temporal course of these symptoms remains unclear.
Childhood Adversity and Combat as Predictors of Depression and Post-Traumatic Stress in Deployed Troops
Soldiers prior to an OIF deployment and Soldiers after an OIF deployment completed a survey to assess the mental health impact of childhood adverse events (e.g., psychological abuse, mental illness in the home) on combat troops.