Military Spouses

Targeting Relational Aggression in Veterans: The Strength at Home Friends and Family Intervention

Objective: We evaluated the effectiveness of Strength at Home Friends and Families (SAH-F), a dyadic group intervention to prevent relational aggression and its negative consequences, in a community-based sample of service members/veterans and significant others who reported relational difficulties.
2015
Hayes, M. A.
Gallagher, M. W.
Gilbert, K. S.
Creech, S. K.
DeCandia, C. J.
Beach, C. A.
Taft, C. T.

Effect of Short-Term Separation on the Behavioral Health of Military Wives

Military spouses are separated from one another for a variety of reasons, including deployment and residential training. This study investigated the effect of short-term separations on military wives' well-being as well as the ways in which other factors are associated with well-being.
2016
Oblea Jr., P. N.
Badger, T. A.
Hopkins-Chadwick, D. L.

Number of Deployments, Relationship Satisfaction and Perpetration of Partner Violence Among U.S. Navy Members

The present brief report examined whether number of deployments, relationship satisfaction, and the interaction between number of deployments and relationship satisfaction predicted Navy members’ reports of perpetrating physical partner violence. Participants were 80 U.S.
2015
Kelley, M. L.
Stambaugh, L.
Milletich, R. J.
Veprinsky, A.
Snell, A. K.