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Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Severity Predicts Aggression After Treatment
The authors examine the relationship between specific posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and interpersonal aggression (verbal, psychological, and physical) among male Veterans completing a residential PTSD treatment program.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Severity Predicts Aggression After Treatment
This study examined the relation between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) severity and aggression (verbal, psychological, and physical aggression) in a longitudinal dataset.
Health Indicators for Military, Veteran, and Civilian Women
Data from a population-based study including civilians, Veterans Active Duty, and National Guard or Reserves members were used to compare the health status of women who have served in the military to that of civilians.
Health Indicators for Military, Veteran, and Civilian Women
Background: Women who have served in the military are a rapidly growing population. No previous studies have compared directly their health status to that of civilians. Purpose: To provide estimates of several leading U.S. health indicators by military service status among women.
Problems With Veteran-Family Communication During Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom Military Deployment
In-depth interviews with male Veterans from Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF) and used to explore the reasons for miscommunication during deployment between Service members and their civilian family members.
Problems With Veteran-Family Communication During Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom Military Deployment
Twenty Reserve component (Army and Marines) and Army National Guard male veterans of Operational Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom discuss their deployment and postdeployment family reintegration experiences.
Multi-Wave Prospective Examination of the Stress-Reactivity Extension of Response Styles Theory of Depression in High-Risk Children and Early Adolescents
Prospective Evaluation of Mental Health and Deployment Experience Among Women in the U.S. Military
Data from the Millennium Cohort Study were used to examine military women's mental health outcomes (depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD]) following deployment.
Prospective Evaluation of Mental Health and Deployment Experience Among Women in the U.S. Military
Previous research has shown that military women often experience potentially severe health outcomes following deployment. Data from the Millennium Cohort Study, a 21-year longitudinal study examining the health effects of military service, were used to examine this issue.
Provider, Veteran, and Family Perspectives on Family Education in Veterans Affairs Community-Based Outpatient Facilities
Focus group and interview data were utilized to examine perceptions of the benefits, feasibility, barriers and logistical considerations of implementing a family education program (SAFE: Support And Family Education) in rural outpatient clinics (CBOCs).
Provider, Veteran, and Family Perspectives on Family Education in Veterans Affairs Community-Based Outpatient Facilities
The Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare system is dedicated to providing high-quality mental health services to all veterans, including the nearly 40% of enrolled veterans living in rural areas.
Mindfulness and its Role in Physical and Psychological Health
This study examined the relationships of mindfulness, a form of focused self‐awareness, with physical and psychological health.
Psychological Traumas of War: Training School Counselors as Home-Front Responders
A workshop was held for school counselors to train them on best practices for helping children with a deployed parent. Attendees participated in discussion groups about their own experiences and rated the usefulness of the training for their careers.
Psychological Traumas of War: Training School Counselors as Home-Front Responders
Purpose: With nearly 3 million US troops having deployed for Operations Enduring Freedom, Iraqi Freedom, and New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND) since the conflicts began, an estimated 2 million children have been separated from a parent.
Incarceration Among Male Veterans: Relative Risk of Imprisonment and Differences Between Veteran and Nonveteran Inmates
The risk of incarceration for male Veterans compared with non-Veterans was examined through the use of national surveys of jail and prison inmates.
Incarceration Among Male Veterans: Relative Risk of Imprisonment and Differences Between Veteran and Nonveteran Inmates
Using data from national surveys of jail and prison inmates conducted in 2002 and 2004, the authors found that male veterans in the age group that entered military service in the early years of the All Volunteer Force (AVF) were at greater risk of incarceration than nonveterans of similar age and
Influence of Bodily Injuries on Symptom Reporting Following Uncomplicated Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in U.S. Military Service Members
Combat-injured Service members diagnosed with mild traumatic brain injury participated in a study examining the relationships among bodily injuries, traumatic stress, and post-concussion symptoms.
Relational Coping During Deployment: Managing Communication and Connection in Relationships
Interviews with female spouses or fianceés of deployed male Service members were conducted to examine relational coping during spousal deployment.
Relational Coping During Deployment: Managing Communication and Connection in Relationships
Wartime deployment involves prolonged separation and creates uncertainty, fear, and disorganization in families (M. J. Peebles-Kleiger & J. H. Kleiger, 1994). This study examined how military wives/fiancées reported coping with the demands they associated with spousal deployment.
Influence of Bodily Injuries on Symptom Reporting Following Uncomplicated Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in U.S. Military Service Members
Objective: To examine the relations among bodily injuries, traumatic stress, and postconcussion symptoms in a sample of combat-injured US service members who sustained a mild traumatic brain injury.
Romantic Relationships Following Wartime Deployment
U.S. Army Reservists and partners of U.S. Army Reservists were interviewed about their relationships after the Reservists returned from a year-long deployment in Iraq.
Romantic Relationships Following Wartime Deployment
This study examines the romantic relationships of reservists following wartime deployment. Members of an Army Reserve unit and their partners participatedin seven waves of interviews in the year following the reservists’ return from deployment.
Adjustment of children and youth in military families: Toward developmental understandings.
Nearly, 2 million children in the United States live in military families. Throughout all branches of the U.S.
Spiritual Needs and Spiritual Care for Veterans at the End of Life and Their Families
Male Veterans with life expectancies of less than 12 months and nine of their family members completed a semi-structured interview to assess their spiritual needs, the spiritual care they have received, and their satisfaction with spiritual care.
Spiritual Needs and Spiritual Care for Veterans at the End of Life and Their Families
Spiritual care is an important domain of palliative care programs across the country and in the Veterans Affairs (VA) Healthcare System specifically.
Spouse Abuse and Combat-Related Deployments in Active Duty Air Force Couples
The records of married U.S. Air Force personnel were reviewed to compare rates of spouse abuse before and after combat deployments to Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation Enduring Freedom (OIF/OEF).
Spouse Abuse and Combat-Related Deployments in Active Duty Air Force Couples
Objective: To conduct the first population-based study comparing spouse abuse rates before and after combat-related deployments during Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation Enduring Freedom among married U.S. Air Force personnel.
Influence of Spirituality on Depression, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and Suicidality in Active Duty Military Personnel
Active Duty military personnel participated in a study examining the role of spirituality in mental health problems. Researchers tested whether spirituality moderates the relationships among combat exposure, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and suicidality.
Influence of Spirituality on Depression, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and Suicidality in Active Duty Military Personnel
Understanding the role of spirituality as a potential coping mechanism for military personnel is important given growing concern about the mental health issues of personnel returning from war.