Department of Family Social Science, University of Minnesota, 290 McNeal Hall, 1985 Buford Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2010 Oct;78(5):599-610. doi: 10.1037/a0020571.
In this article, we report findings from a 1-year longitudinal study examining the impact of change in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms following combat deployment on National Guard soldiers' perceived parenting and couple adjustment 1 year following return from Iraq.
Participants were 468 Army National Guard fathers from a brigade combat team (mean age = 36 years; median deployment length = 16 months; 89% European American, 5% African American, 6% Hispanic American). Participants completed an in-theater survey 1 month before returning home from Operation Iraqi Freedom deployment (Time 1) and again 1 year postdeployment (Time 2). The PTSD Checklist-Military Version (PCL-M; Weathers, Litz, Herman, Huska, & Keane, 1993) was gathered at both times, and 2 items assessing social support were gathered at baseline only. At Time 2, participants also completed self-report measures of parenting (Alabama Parenting Questionnaire-Short Form; Elgar, Waschbusch, Dadds, & Sigvaldason, 2007), couple adjustment (Dyadic Adjustment Scale-7; Sharpley & Rogers, 1984; Spanier, 1976), parent-child relationship quality (4 items from the Social Adjustment Scale-Self-Report; Weissman & Bothwell, 1976), alcohol use (Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; Babor, Higgins-Biddle, Saunders, & Monteiro, 2001), and items assessing injuries sustained while deployed.
Structural equation modeling analyses showed that increases in PTSD symptoms were associated with poorer couple adjustment and greater perceived parenting challenges at Time 2 (both at p < .001). Furthermore, PTSD symptoms predicted parenting challenges independent of their impact on couple adjustment.
Findings highlight the importance of investigating and intervening to support parenting and couple adjustment among combat-affected National Guard families.
本文报告了一项为期 1 年的纵向研究结果,该研究考察了战斗部署后创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状的变化对从伊拉克回国后 1 年内国民警卫队士兵感知育儿和夫妻关系调整的影响。
参与者是来自一个旅战斗队的 468 名陆军国民警卫队士兵(平均年龄=36 岁;中位数部署长度=16 个月;89%为欧洲裔美国人,5%为非裔美国人,6%为西班牙裔美国人)。参与者在从伊拉克自由行动部署回国前 1 个月(时间 1)和部署后 1 年(时间 2)完成了一项在战区进行的调查。在两次调查中都收集了创伤后应激障碍检查表-军事版(PCL-M;Weathers、Litz、Herman、Huska 和 Keane,1993),仅在基线时收集了 2 项评估社会支持的项目。在时间 2,参与者还完成了育儿的自我报告测量(阿拉巴马育儿问卷-短表;Elgar、Waschbusch、Dadds 和 Sigvaldason,2007)、夫妻关系调整(对偶调整量表-7;Sharpley 和 Rogers,1984;Spanier,1976)、亲子关系质量(来自社会适应量表-自我报告的 4 个项目;Weissman 和 Bothwell,1976)、酒精使用(酒精使用障碍识别测试;Babor、Higgins-Biddle、Saunders 和 Monteiro,2001)以及在部署期间受伤的评估。
结构方程模型分析表明,PTSD 症状的增加与时间 2 时夫妻关系调整较差和育儿挑战感知增加有关(均为 p<.001)。此外,PTSD 症状预测了育儿挑战,而与对夫妻关系调整的影响无关。
研究结果强调了调查和干预以支持受战斗影响的国民警卫队家庭的育儿和夫妻关系调整的重要性。