London Andrew S
Associate Dean and Professor of Sociology, Faculty Associate, Aging Studies Institute, Research Affiliate, Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, 200 Eggers Hall, Syracuse, NY, 13244-1020, United States.
SSM Popul Health. 2021 Sep 9;16:100920. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100920. eCollection 2021 Dec.
To examine whether having a parent and/or a sibling currently serving in the military is associated with major depression and use of mental health services among 12-17 year old adolescents in the United States.
Descriptive and multivariate logistic regression analyses are conducted using pooled data from the 2016-2019 National Survey of Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). Analyses are weighted and standard errors are adjusted for the complex sampling design.
Adolescents are more likely to have a sibling than a parent currently serving in the military. Having a sibling currently in the military increases the likelihood of having a lifetime and a past-year major depressive episode (MDE), but not a past-year MDE with severe role impairment or use of mental health services. Having a parent in the military is not associated with any measure of MDE, but increases use of specialty outpatient, specialty inpatient/residential, and non-specialty mental health services net of MDE and sociodemographic controls.
Considerable attention has focused on risk and resilience among the dependent children of current service members. A better understanding of how the current military service experiences of siblings, as well as parents, influences related adolescents' mental health, mental health care service use, substance use, and health behaviors has the potential to contribute to programs and interventions that can enhance the well-being of youth with intra-generational, as well as inter-generational, connections to the military. Adolescents who have a sibling currently serving in the military are an at-risk population for MDE and potentially other mental and behavioral health problems.
探讨在美国,父母和/或兄弟姐妹目前正在服兵役与12至17岁青少年的重度抑郁症及心理健康服务使用情况之间是否存在关联。
使用2016 - 2019年全国药物使用和健康调查(NSDUH)的汇总数据进行描述性和多变量逻辑回归分析。分析采用加权处理,并针对复杂抽样设计调整标准误差。
与父母目前正在服兵役相比,青少年更有可能有兄弟姐妹正在服兵役。有兄弟姐妹正在服兵役会增加终生及过去一年患重度抑郁发作(MDE)的可能性,但不会增加过去一年伴有严重角色功能损害的MDE或心理健康服务使用的可能性。有父母服兵役与任何MDE指标均无关联,但在排除MDE和社会人口统计学控制因素后,会增加专科门诊、专科住院/寄宿及非专科心理健康服务的使用。
相当多的关注集中在现役军人受抚养子女的风险和复原力上。更好地理解兄弟姐妹以及父母目前的服役经历如何影响相关青少年的心理健康、心理健康护理服务使用、物质使用和健康行为,有可能为能够增进与军队有代内以及代际联系的青少年福祉的项目和干预措施做出贡献。有兄弟姐妹目前正在服兵役的青少年是患MDE以及潜在的其他心理和行为健康问题的高危人群。