PTSD and Physical Health Symptoms Among Veterans: Associated with Child and Relationship Functioning
Veterans' family relationships may be impacted by deployment and its effects on Veteran mental and physical health.
Veterans' family relationships may be impacted by deployment and its effects on Veteran mental and physical health.
Psychological distress among cohabitating female partners of combat Veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was examined in a cross-sectional study using a modified version of the Health Belief Model.
Caring for a loved one with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can be stressful and a large burden on caretakers.
Although a subset of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans show aggression toward others after they return home from military service, little is known about protective mechanisms that could be bolstered to prevent violence.
Many OIF/OEF Veterans report problematic aggression and violence; however, little research has examined risk or protective factors of Veteran violence.
This article reports pilot data from phase I of a project to develop and evaluate a self-directed program of integrative therapies for National Guard personnel and significant relationship partners to support r_int_gration and resilience after return from Iraq or Afghanistan.
This study analyzed report pilot data from phase one of a project to develop and evaluate a selfdirected program of integrative therapies for National Guard personnel and significant relationship partners (N = 43 dyads) to support reintegration and resilience after return from Iraq or Afghanistan
This study examines military adolescents’ experiences of managing private information within their families during a parental deployment. Thirty-eight adolescents were interviewed about how they and their families managed private information across the deployment cycle.
This study sought to explore adolescents' perspectives of how private information within their family was managed during their parents' military deployment.
Research traditionally has focused on the development of symptoms in those who experienced war trauma directly but overlooked the impact of trauma in the partners of soldiers.