Middle Childhood (5-12 years)
We investigated associations between children's representations of mothers in their play narratives and measures of children's and mother socioemotional adaptation, and explored the development of these representations between the ages of 4 and 5 years.
1997
Oppenheim, D.
Emde, R. N.
Warren, S.
Parenting behaviors and relationships can have a strong impact on children's well-being. Relationships between four and five year old’s behavior, representations of their mothers (i.e., negative, positive, disciplinary), and mother’s psychological health were examined.
1997
Oppenheim, D.
Emde, R. N.
Warren, S.
Although studies have begun to explore the impact of the current wars on child well-being, none have examined how children are doing across social, emotional, and academic domains.
2010
Chandra, A.
Lara-Cinisomo, S.
Jaycox, L. H.
Tanielian, T.
Burns, R. M.
Ruder, T.
Han, B.
The well being of children and caregivers during a parent’s deployment was examined through interviews with the at-home parent (i.e., caregiver) and the child.
2010
Chandra, A.
Lara-Cinisomo, S.
Jaycox, L. H.
Tanielian, T.
Burns, R. M.
Ruder, T.
Han, B.
This study examined deployment effects in children and spouses of National Guard troops using a longitudinal design to assess 18 children (ages 6 to 17 years) and 13 non-deployed spouses before, during, and after deployment.
2011
Pfefferbaum, B.
Houston, J. B.
Sherman, M. D.
Melson, A. G.
Children of deployed Service members may experience a variety of difficulties, including emotional and behavioral concerns.
2011
Pfefferbaum, B.
Houston, J. B.
Sherman, M. D.
Melson, A. G.
This article makes an assessment of what is known about how deployment of the U.S. National Guard troops is affecting their children. It also evaluates these children's perceptions and thoughts on the experience of their parents getting deployed to active combat.
2009
Houston, J. B.
Pfefferbaum, B.
Sherman, M. D.
Melson, A. G.
Jeon-Slaughter, H.
Brand, M. W.
Jarman, Y.
Children of deployed Service members may face many difficulties and concerns, but little research addresses child deployment perspectives. Children of newly-deployed National Guard Soldiers were interviewed about their perspectives on deployment and frequencies of responses were calculated.
2009
Houston, J. B.
Pfefferbaum, B.
Sherman, M. D.
Melson, A. G.
Jeon-Slaughter, H.
Brand, M. W.
Jarman, Y.
Objective: To conduct the first population-based study comparing the frequency of child maltreatment among active-duty United States Air Force (USAF) maltreating parents before and after combat-related deployment.
2014
Thomsen, C. J.
Rabenhorst, M. M.
McCarthy, R. J.
Milner, J. S.
Travis, W. J.
Foster, R. E.
Copeland, C. W.
Understanding rates and risk factors for child maltreatment among military populations is vital for creating effective prevention and intervention programs.
2014
Thomsen, C. J.
Rabenhorst, M. M.
McCarthy, R. J.
Milner, J. S.
Travis, W. J.
Foster, R. E.
Copeland, C. W.