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Paternal separation and the military dependent child.

Gentry W. Yeatman
- 01 May 1981 - 
- Vol. 146, Iss: 5, pp 320-322
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This article is published in Military Medicine.The article was published on 1981-05-01. It has received 44 citations till now.

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The Long War and Parental Combat Deployment: Effects on Military Children and At-Home Spouses

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the impact of deployments on military children and found that parental combat deployment has a cumulative effect on children that remains even after the deployed parent returns home, and that is predicted by psychological distress of both the AD and AHC parent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Military Families Under Stress: Implications for Family Life Education†

TL;DR: The authors provide a summary of the limited research on three uniquely stressful experiences of military families: relocation, separation, and reunion, using the insights derived from this literature, identify and discuss interventions to assist and guide military families through these unique events.

The Long War and Parental CombatDeployment: Effects on MilitaryChildren and At-Home Spouses

TL;DR: Findings indicate that parental combat deployment has a cumulative effect on children that remains even after the deployed parent returns home, and that is predicted by psychological distress of both the AD and AHC parent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parental Deployment and Youth in Military Families: Exploring Uncertainty and Ambiguous Loss*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the nature of uncertainty and ambiguous loss among youth that had a parent deployed, most often to a war zone, and found that ambiguous loss is a useful concept for understanding the experien- ces of these youth and for structuring prevention and intervention efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental issues impacting military families with young children during single and multiple deployments

TL;DR: It was found young children with a deployed parent showed increased behavior problems during deployment and increased attachment behaviors at reunion compared with children whose parents had not experienced a recent deployment.
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