Search the Research

The research team within the Center for Research and Outreach has a multi-dimensional approach that includes conducting empirical studies, program evaluations, analysis of secondary data, and the use of empirical research to identify and address key issues impacting children, youth, and families. Through this process, we review academic literature, translate research into practice, develop materials to help non-academics be critical consumers of scientific research, and promote the use of evidenced-based information in decision making.

Preparing for Deployment: Examining Family-and Individual-Level Factors

Type
Abstract

Deployment can be a significant source of stress for military families. Understanding how families prepare in the face of such stress, and which families are more versus less likely to prepare, is a priority of the Department of Defense.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Troxel, W. M. Trail, T. E. Jaycox, L. H. Chandra, A.

Staying Connected on the Home Front: Communication and Well-being of Civilian Spouses During Deployment

Type
PRTW

Survey data were used to examine the association between the frequency of asynchronous (e.g., letters, email) and synchronous (e.g., telephone, video) communication on marital quality and psychological well-being (i.e., anxiety, depression, sleep, and loneliness) of civilian spouses during their

Publication year
2016
Authors
Meek, N. A. Totenhagen, C. J. Hawkins, S. A. Borden, L. M.

Youth Workers' Professional Development: The Importance of Youth Development Certificate Programs

Type
Research Report

Youth development has emerged as an important field within the study of human development in recent years. High-quality youth programs can foster positive development of children and adolescents and minimize the likelihood of youth developing problem behaviors.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Richmond, A. Brown, S. Braughton, J. Otto, M. Jaeger, E. Roeske, R. Werner, E. Wilcox, S. Otto, A. Borden, L. M.

Female Veterans' Preferences for Counseling Related to Intimate Partner Violence: Informing Patient-Centered Interventions

Type
PRTW

Female Veterans who experience intimate partner violence (IPV) may struggle in finding the best ways to deal with emotional distress and fear for physical safety. This study examined priorities and preferences for healthcare-based IPV counseling for female Veterans.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Iverson, K. M. Stirman, S. W. Street, A. E. Gerber, M. R. Carpenter, S. L. Dichter, M. E. Bair-Merritt, M. Vogt, D.

Supporting the Healthy Development of Strong Families

Type
Research Report

Families are faced with a variety of positive and negative challenges throughout the family life cycle.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Borden, L. M. Brown, S. Casper, D. M. Cheatom, O. Hawkey, K. R. Hawkins, S. Hoang, T. Jordan, A. C. Kuhl, M. W. Lu, Z. Majerle, A. Otto, M. Rea, J. Richmond, A. Sherman, M. D. Shortreed, T. Steinman, D. Westerhof, L. Williams, R.

Parent's Early Life Stressful Experiences, their Present Well-Being, and that of their Children

Type
Abstract

Parents’ early life stressful experiences have lifelong consequences, not only for themselves but also for their children. The current study utilized a sample of military families (n 266) including data from both active-duty and civilian parents and their adolescent children.

Publication year
2016
Authors
O'Neal, C. W. Richardson, E. W. Mancini, J. A. Grimsley, R. N.

Impact of Military Deployment on the Development and Behavior of Children

Type
Abstract

Many US military families have faced separations of at least 1 family member for extended periods of time. This article shows how changes in military culture have increased the repercussions for military families, and especially for military-connected children.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Nelson, S. C. Baker, M. J. Weston, C. G.

Fact Sheet - Deployment and Child Abuse and Neglect: Understanding the Data

Type
Research Report

The examination of rates of child abuse and neglect in military families generally and during the deployment cycle specifically as well as the exploration of general risk and protective factors have significant implications for policies, programs, and future research.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Gunty, A. Richmond, A. Lu, Z. Otto, M. Williams, R. Jaeger, E. Wilcox, S. Roeske, R. Borden, L. M.

Military Culture

Type
Research Report

This document provides the results of a comprehensive review of trainings and resources that educate civilian populations about military culture.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Gunty, A. Richmond, A. Williams, R. Otto, M. Borden, L. M.

Intimate Partner Maltreatment Recidivism in U.S. Air Force families

Type
Abstract

Research has demonstrated that perpetrator characteristics (gender, age, and military status) and incident characteristics (perpetrator substance use and initial incident severity) are associated with intimate partner maltreatment recidivism.

Publication year
2016
Authors
Coley, S. L. McCarthy, R. J. Milner, J. S. Ormsby, L. Travis, W. J.