Adolescence (12-18 years)
Health care records of 55,000 non-pregnant spouses and 137,000 children of deployed Active Duty U.S. Army personnel were compared to records of spouses and children of non-deployed Soldiers to study changes in dependent health care utilization during deployment.
2012
Larson, M. J.
Mohr, B. A.
Adams, R. S.
Ritter, G.
Perloff, J.
Williams, T. V.
Jeffery, D. D.
Tompkins, C.
Educators, policy makers, and funders increasingly argue that structured afterschool activities can provide youth with valuable supports for development. Studies assessing the impact of particular programs and strategies, however, are rare.
2001
Kahne, J.
Nagaoka, J.
Brown, A.
O’Brien, J.
Quinn, T.
Thiede, K.
After-school programs are often promoted as providing youth with opportunities and resources for development; however, the merit of these programs is not always assessed. This study compared school-based and community-based after-school programs and school opportunities.
2001
Kahne, J.
Nagaoka, J.
Brown, A.
O’Brien, J.
Quinn, T.
Thiede, K.
Examined the associations of adolescents' self-reported anxiety sensitivity with semistructured, interview-based anxiety and depressive symptoms and anxiety disorders.
2002
Pollock, R. A.
Carter, A. S.
Avenevoli, S.
Dierker, L. C.
Chazan-Cohen, R.
Merikangas, K. R.
Adolescents were assessed to determine the associations between anxiety sensitivity and anxiety symptoms, anxiety disorders, and anxiety comorbidity.
2002
Pollock, R. A.
Carter, A. S.
Avenevoli, S.
Dierker, L. C.
Chazan-Cohen, R.
Merikangas, K. R.
We investigated whether parental anxiety was related to anxiety sensitivity (AS) in offspring. Subjects were 261 offspring (aged 6–17 years) of parents with lifetime DSM-IV anxiety and/or mood disorders, and 79 offspring of parents with no lifetime anxiety, mood, or psychotic disorder.
2002
Mannuzza, S.
Klein, R. G.
Moulton, L J.
Scarfone, N.
Malloy, P.
Vosburg, S. K.
Klein, D. F.
When a parent has a mental health disorder, it may affect the environment in which children live, which may have certain effects on the children.
2002
Mannuzza, S.
Klein, R. G.
Moulton, L J.
Scarfone, N.
Malloy, P.
Vosburg, S. K.
Klein, D. F.
Objectives. We examined associations between parental military service and adolescent well-being. Methods. We used cross-sectional data from the 2008 Washington State Healthy Youth Survey collected in public school grades 8, 10, and 12 (n = 10,606).
2011
Reed, S. C.
Bell, J. F.
Edwards, T. C.
In this cross-sectional, cohort study, researchers examined associations between parental military service and adolescent well-being (as measured by quality of life, depressed mood, and thoughts of suicide) using data from the 2008 Washington State Healthy Youth Survey.
2011
Reed, S. C.
Bell, J. F.
Edwards, T. C.
This study examined coping, effortful control, and mental health among 65 youth (ages 9–15) residing in families where at least one parent was serving in the United States military. Parents provided basic demographic and deployment information.
2009