Service Members

Differential Child Maltreatment Risk Across Deployment Periods of US Army Soldiers

Family well-being can be greatly impacted by stressful life events; parental deployment can increase that stress. The risk of maltreatment in young children of U.S Army soldiers throughout different deployment cycles was explored in this study.

2015
Taylor, C. M.
Ross, M. E.
Wood, J. N.
Griffis, H. M.
Harb, G. C.
Mi, L.
Song, L.
Strane, D.
Lynch, K. G.
Rubin, D. M.

Child Maltreatment and Substance Abuse Among U.S. Army Soldiers

Although substance abuse has consistently been linked to child maltreatment, no study to date has described the extent of substance abuse among child maltreatment offenders within the military. Analysis of U.S.

2008
Gibbs, D. A.
Martin, S. L.
Johnson, R. E.
Rentz, E. D.
Clinton-Sherrod, M.
Hardison, J.

Child Maltreatment Among U.S. Air Force Parents Deployed in Support of Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation Enduring Freedom

This study examined child maltreatment perpetration among 99,697 active-duty U.S. Air Force parents who completed a combat deployment. Using the deploying parent as the unit of analysis, we analyzed whether child maltreatment rates increased postdeployement relative to predeployment.

2015
Rabenhorst, M. M.
McCarthy, R. J.
Thomsen, C. J.
Milner, J. S.
Travis, W. J.
Colasanti, M. P.