Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, Nathanson Family Reslience Center, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev. 2013 Sep;16(3):245-65. doi: 10.1007/s10567-013-0138-y.
The scope of sustained military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan has placed great demands on the Armed Forces of the United States, and accordingly, military families have been faced with deployments in more rapid succession than ever before. When military parents fulfill occupational duties during wartime, military children and families face multiple challenges, including extended separations, disruptions in family routines, and potentially compromised parenting related to traumatic exposure and subsequent mental health problems. Such challenges can begin to exert a significant toll on the well-being of both individuals and relationships (e.g., marital, parent-child) within military families. In order to respond more effectively to the needs of military families, it is essential that mental health clinicians and researchers have a better understanding of the challenges faced by military families throughout the entire deployment experience and the ways in which these challenges may have a cumulative impact over multiple deployments. Moreover, the mental health field must become better prepared to support service members and families across a rapidly evolving landscape of military operations around the world, including those who are making the transition from active duty to Veteran status and navigating a return to civilian life and those families in which parents will continue to actively serve and deploy in combat zones. In this article, we utilize family systems and ecological perspectives to advance our understanding of how military families negotiate repeated deployment experiences and how such experiences impact the well-being and adjustment of families at the individual, dyadic, and whole family level.
持续的伊拉克和阿富汗军事行动对美国武装部队提出了巨大要求,相应地,军人家属也面临着比以往任何时候都更频繁的部署。当军人父母在战时履行职业职责时,军人子女和家庭面临着许多挑战,包括长时间的分离、家庭日常生活的中断,以及与创伤暴露和随后的心理健康问题相关的潜在育儿问题。这些挑战可能开始对军人家庭的个人和关系(如婚姻、亲子)的幸福产生重大影响。为了更有效地满足军人家庭的需求,心理健康临床医生和研究人员必须更好地了解军人家庭在整个部署过程中所面临的挑战,以及这些挑战如何在多次部署中产生累积影响。此外,心理健康领域必须为世界各地快速演变的军事行动做好更好的准备,包括那些从现役军人向退伍军人过渡并正在回归平民生活的军人及其家庭,以及那些父母将继续在战区积极服役和部署的家庭。在本文中,我们利用家庭系统和生态观点来提高我们对军人家庭如何协商多次部署经历的理解,以及这些经历如何影响个人、对偶和整个家庭层面家庭的幸福和调整。