Quality of Life Among U.S. Army Spouses During the Iraq War
During the course of previous military conflicts, attention has been focused on separations experienced by service members and their loved ones.
During the course of previous military conflicts, attention has been focused on separations experienced by service members and their loved ones.
Parents' positive and negative feelings about their young children influence both parenting behavior and child problem behavior. Research has not previously examined factors that contribute to positive and negative feelings in parents of young children with developmental delay (DD).
This narrative study features 8 women who shared their stories of systemic barriers faced in the process of leaving an abusive military marriage.
Children are among the most vulnerable groups during and after a natural disaster experiencing a range of stressors such as fear of death or loss of a loved one, the loss of a home and community, displacement to a strange neighborhood or school, and even separation from their family.
The current study investigated the parent–child relationship by examining associations between parent stress, parental discipline strategies, child disruptive behavior problems, and level of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) symptoms.
Using an actor-partner interdependence model, we examined whether veterans’ post traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS)contributed to partners’ drug abuse symptoms,whether partners’ drug abuse symptoms contributed to intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration, and whether drug abuse symptoms mediated
The purpose of this study was to document the first-person perspectives of 10 Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF) veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) regarding their efforts to move from homelessness to employment.
Guided by the life-course perspective, this study contributes to the family caregiving, aging, and disability literature by examining the daily experiences of three types of family caregivers in midlife and late adulthood.
Military settings present a unique context that can affect the continuity of care for substance abuse and other issues.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms are associated with disruptions in both couple functioning and parenting, and limited research suggests that, among military couples, perceptions of couple functioning and parenting stress are a function of both one’s own and one’s partner’s mental he