Changing Family Roles - Across the Deployment Cycle
Abstract
OVERVIEW: This multi-informant, longitudinal investigation of Army National Guard families experience of deployment project focuses on a) the negotiation and management of family roles during deployment cycles, and b) on the impact of technology-based communication during deployment on later psychological distress and role functioning. PROGRESS TO DATE: -Recruited 85 families with federal funding for a total of 134 since proposal submission. -Obtained reintegration data from 248 families. -Twelve conference presentations delivered, five manuscripts published, others under review. Findings Regarding Deployment Communication: At-home partners who reported higher levels of support also reported feeling closer to service members. On days when at-home partners reported receiving more support, they also reported feeling closer to service members. Finding Regarding Sibling Relationships: At-home partners reporting higher levels of warmth and lower levels of agonism also reported lower levels of externalizing behavior in their children. When at-home partners reported their childrens relationship changed over the course of the study, so did their reports of externalizing behavior in their children.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- May 01, 2019
- Accession Number
- AD1079664
Entities
People
- David B. Topp
- Shelley MacDermid Wadsworth
Organizations
- Purdue University