Cheng Cheuk H, Ali-Saleh Darawshy Neveen, Lee Susanne, Brigman Hayley, DeGarmo Dave, Gewirtz Abigail
Department of Family Social Science, University of Minnesota Twin Cities, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
Department of Psychology, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA.
Fam Process. 2024 Mar;63(1):80-96. doi: 10.1111/famp.12918. Epub 2023 Aug 1.
The military family stress (MFS) model conceptualizes that wartime deployments and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms are associated with couple, parenting, and child adjustment difficulties. The aim of this study was to replicate and extend the military family stress model by examining the associations among deployment length, PTSD symptoms, marital functioning, parenting practices, and child adjustment in a replication sample of both National Guard and Reserve (NG/R) as well as active-duty service member families. The MFS model is extended to test whether these relationships vary between mothers and fathers. The sample included 208 families enrolled in a randomized controlled trial of a parenting program for military families (94.4% of fathers and 21.6% of mothers were deployed). Replicating the MFS model, we specified parenting, marital quality, and child adjustment as latent variables and conducted multi-group structural equation models. Parenting practices were positively associated with marital quality and child adjustment. PTSD symptoms were negatively associated with marital quality. The indirect effect from PTSD symptoms to parenting practices through marital quality was marginally significant. The indirect effect from marital quality to child adjustment through parenting practices was significant. There were no significant gender differences between the two structural models. This study provides empirical support for the MFS model. Results demonstrate that deployment-related stressors are significantly associated with parent and family functioning. Parenting programs for military families might effectively target similar risk processes among both mothers and fathers.
军事家庭压力(MFS)模型认为,战时部署和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状与夫妻关系、育儿及儿童适应困难有关。本研究的目的是通过在国民警卫队和预备役(NG/R)以及现役军人家庭的复制样本中检验部署时长、PTSD症状、婚姻功能、育儿方式和儿童适应之间的关联,来复制和扩展军事家庭压力模型。MFS模型得到扩展,以检验这些关系在母亲和父亲之间是否存在差异。样本包括参与一项针对军事家庭的育儿项目随机对照试验的208个家庭(94.4%的父亲和21.6%的母亲被部署)。我们通过将育儿方式、婚姻质量和儿童适应指定为潜在变量并进行多组结构方程模型,来复制MFS模型。育儿方式与婚姻质量和儿童适应呈正相关。PTSD症状与婚姻质量呈负相关。PTSD症状通过婚姻质量对育儿方式产生的间接效应微显著。婚姻质量通过育儿方式对儿童适应产生的间接效应显著。两个结构模型之间不存在显著的性别差异。本研究为MFS模型提供了实证支持。结果表明,与部署相关的压力源与父母及家庭功能显著相关。针对军事家庭的育儿项目可能会有效地针对母亲和父亲中类似的风险过程。