Family separation from military service and children's externalizing symptoms: Exploring moderation by non‐military spouse employment, family financial stress, marital quality, and the parenting alliance

Author:

Richardson Sabrina M.12ORCID,Pflieger Jacqueline C.12,Hisle‐Gorman Elizabeth3,Briggs Ernestine C.45,Fairbank John A.56,Stander Valerie A.2

Affiliation:

1. Leidos, Inc. San Diego California USA

2. Naval Health Research Center Center for Deployment Health Research San Diego California USA

3. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences School of Medicine, Pediatrics Bethesda Maryland USA

4. Center for Child and Family Health Durham North Carolina USA

5. UCLA‐Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Duke University School of Medicine Durham North Carolina USA

6. Mid‐Atlantic Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center (VISN 6 MIRECC) Durham VA Health Care System Durham North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractMilitary separation is a well‐documented vulnerability point for service members, yet little is known regarding how children fare across this transition. The current study examined 909 military‐connected children from the Millennium Cohort Family Study (Wave 1 Mage = 3.88 years, SD = .095) across a 3‐year period to explore whether separation predicted child externalizing symptoms over and above Wave 1 externalizing levels, by comparing separated versus not separated military families over time. We also explored if non‐military spouse employment, financial stress, marital quality, or parenting alliance moderated the relation of separation with child externalizing. Data were collected via a parent‐reported online questionnaire and administrative military records. Results showed that separation was unrelated to externalizing. However, moderation analyses suggested that for those who separated, non‐military spouses’ employment prior to separation was related to less externalizing, whereas the parenting alliance was related to less externalizing only for families who remained in the military. Recommendations include assistance with spouse employment prior to military separation and parenting support throughout military service.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Sociology and Political Science,Developmental and Educational Psychology

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