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Family Reintegration of Reserve Service Members Following Wartime Deployment:

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And she sees stuff and she is like, I don't want daddy around... She will tell him, 'Daddy, I need to eat.' ' Daddy, I need to go to bed.' It is a bad situation. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Family Reintegration of Reserve Service Members Following Wartime Deployment:


1
Family Reintegration of Reserve Service Members
Following Wartime Deployment
  • A Qualitative Exploration of Wives Experience
  • by Lisa R. Gorbaty

2
Setting the Stage
  • Operation Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan) began on
    October 7, 2001 and Operation Iraqi Freedom
    (Iraq) began on March 19, 2003
  • Of the 1,010,761 soldiers in the Army, 48 are
    active duty, 33 are National Guard and 19 are
    Reserve
  • At one point in 2005, over half of all troops
    deployed to Iraq were in the National Guard
    (Selsky, 2007)
  • According to the Department of Defense (2007),
    75 of all reserve troops are parents

3
Purpose of the Present Study
  • Gain an in-depth understanding of the experience
    of spouses of Army Reserve and Army National
    Guard service members
  • To examine long term family reintegration
    processes (5 mos-4 years following return)
  • To examine how wartime deployment cycles affect
    families (historically, reserve troops did not
    deploy to combat zones)

4
Structured Interview
  • Deployment
  • Reintegration (ST LT)
  • Level of support
  • Transition to civilian work
  • Experience as civilian spouse with deployed
    husband
  • Physical Mental Health
  • Marriage

5
Demographic Information
  • (n8)
  • Caucasian, English speaking
  • Average age 40, range 25-57 years old
  • 5 Protestant, 2 Catholic, 1 non-denominational
    Christian
  • 5 National Guard, 3 Army Reserve
  • 3 Officers (attend Officers Candidate School), 4
    Non-commissioned Officers (an enlisted service
    member that has been granted authority by an
    Officer), 1 Warrant Officer (technical experts
    rank considered between NCOs and Officers)
  • Lived 30-90 miles from nearest military base
  • Husbands returned 5mo-4years earlier
  • Children, age range 3mo-27 years

6
Challenges for Reservist families
  • Participants had held no expectation that husband
    would deploy to war zone
  • Civilian employment status financial concerns
  • Lack of camaraderie with other military families
    (i.e. husbands were cross-leveled, pulled from
    units across New England)
  • Lack of formal military and social support
  • Caught between civilian and military world
  • Increased comfort seeking support from other
    military wives or family with military
    experience
  • Lack of understanding from general public

7
Ambiguous Loss
  • Many participants reported that their husbands
    were changed men upon return
  • PTSD damage to marital relationship, parental
    relationship feelings of anger, resentment,
    isolation were reported
  • Ambiguous Loss (Boss, 2007)
  • Psychological presence, physical absence
  • Physical presence, psychological absence
  • Ambivalence regarding gratitude for husbands
    service and resentment over changes

8
Concerns of Burdening Others
  • Participants reported that both partners withheld
    information during deployment in an effort to
    avoid burdening or worrying one another during
    deployment
  • Majority of wives believed husbands withheld
    extent of wartime experiences upon return
  • Wives ambivalence about gaining this
    information
  • Keeping brave front for children and general
    community

9
Social Support FRGs
  • All participants felt supported to some degree,
    majority would have appreciated additional
    supports all felt formal military supports were
    lacking
  • Commonly sought support from friends, family,
    neighbors, church may be isolated in community
    (Bartone, 1999) so accessing support may be
    challenging
  • Problems with FRGs location, times, gossipy,
    lacking in information

10
Shifts in Roles and Responsibilities
  • All participants reported shifts in household
    roles and responsibilities during deployment
    five reported major changes two participants
    unable to maintain employment
  • Particular problems for those married to veterans
    with PTSD (assuming all responsibilities for
    house, childcare, finances)
  • Half of all participants did not want to
    relinquish new roles they had adopted during
    deployment, particularly those associated with
    increased independence
  • Lack of clarity may be disorienting for spouse,
    veteran, and children

11
Childrens Experience
  • Two families had children seeing MH
    professionals, another debating
  • Increased anger and resentment (25), academic
    problems (25), major behavioral problems (13)
  • How are these childrens issues understood by
    friends, teachers, etc.? (vignette)
  • Veteran difficulty assuming parenting role upon
    return as a result of PTSD
  • Veteran difficult assuming parenting roleleft
    baby, returns to toddler

12
Effects of PTSD on Families
  • PTSD- 25 in present study, consistent with
    national reported average (DeAngelis, 2007)
  • All reported some degree of MH symptoms
  • Unable to effectively parent worry about leaving
    child alone with veteran
  • Veteran not wanting to assume any responsibility
  • Rely on extended family for childcare
  • Constant attempts to predict mood of veteran
  • Contemplated divorce living with a stranger
  • Lack of sexual intimacy

13
Vignette
  • During that first year, I was afraid to leave
    him home with her, because the two or three times
    that I did, he was either in the emergency room
    with her or he wasnt paying attention and she
    fell down the stairs. I shouldnt feel that way.
    And now she sees it. And she sees stuff and she
    is like, I dont want daddy around. When he is
    home with her, he will sit here and watch TV and
    wont pay attention to her. And it is sad when
    she is in front of him and says Daddy, hello? I
    hate to compare him to other people, but I see
    all the other dads out there with their kids
    playing and he is in here watching TV She knows
    more about what is going on than he does. She
    will tell him, Daddy, I need to eat. Daddy, I
    need to go to bed. It is a bad situation.
  • Also hard for father who left when child was 6
    mos, ret when she was 2

14
Needs Proposed by Participants
  • Spontaneously offered responses
  • Increased social supports for both spouses and
    children during deployment
  • Family supports following returnespecially for
    families of veterans with PTSDgeneral guidance
    around reintegration process
  • FRGs to continue after soldiers return
  • Psycho-education regarding signs and symptoms of
    PTSD for families and soldiers
  • Information about services available and how to
    access these services

15
Needs Proposed by Participants (contd)
  • Military assessing mental and physical health
    problems more appropriately
  • Participants reported concern over assessing MH
    problems immediately upon return (stigma,
    excitement of reunion)
  • Employee Assistance Programs

16
Positive Outcomes
  • Majority of participants reported increased
    appreciation of family and new perspective on
    life
  • Personal growth
  • Growth as a couple
  • Closer as family unit
  • Improved communication
  • Trauma can provide opportunity for growth and
    resiliency (Walsh, 2007)

17
Clinical Implications
  • More services for families (making FRGs more
    accessible by alternating times, locations, MH
    professionals available support groups for
    families of veterans with PTSD)
  • Better screening for MH problems (mandated
    screenings at three month intervals in person
    interview)
  • Psycho-education weekends for families (increase
    camaraderie educate mental health issues)
  • Support groups for children information
    dispersed to teachers, doctors in civilian
    community
  • Educating MH professionals to ask about military
    service in the family
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