Active Component
Intimate Partner Violence: Strategies to Engage Male Victims
In recent decades, research on intimate partner violence (IPV) has yielded important information on prevalence rates, risk factors, and outcomes about female IPV victims; however, there remains a limited amount of research about male victims of IPV, especially male victims in the military.
Family Stressors and Postdeployment Mental Health in Single Versus Partnered Parents Deployed in Support of the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
Little is known about the family-related stress and postdeployment adjustment of single versus partnered parents deployed in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Family Stressors and Postdeployment Mental Health in Single Versus Partnered Parents Deployed in Support of the Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
An examination of 318 single (n = 74) and partnered (n = 244) parents exposure to family-related stressors during and after deployment and post-deployment psychological symptoms was conducted. The sample included Veterans of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF).
PTSD Symptoms and Family Versus Stranger Violence in Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
As a diagnosis, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been associated with violence committed by veterans in many studies; however, a potential link to specific PTSD symptoms has received relatively less attention.
PTSD Symptoms and Family Versus Stranger Violence in Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
Several studies have demonstrated a link between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and aggressive, violent behavior among Veterans. Data from Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans were used to examine the association between specific PTSD symptoms and family and stranger violence.
Psychosocial Screening in Children With Wartime-Deployed Parents
Children of U.S. military families are exposed to unique challenges and stressors directly related to their parents' wartime deployments, potentially placing them at higher risk for psychosocial disruption.
Psychosocial Screening in Children With Wartime-Deployed Parents
Self-report data from parent and youth were utilized to investigate the effects of parental military deployment on adolescents' psychosocial difficulties (internalizing symptoms like depression and anxiety and externalizing symptoms like school and attention problems).