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Journal Article

Citation

Cunitz K, Dölitzsch C, Kösters M, Willmund GD, Zimmermann P, Bühler AH, Fegert JM, Ziegenhain U, Kölch M. Child Adolesc. Psychiatry Ment. Health 2019; 13: e26.

Affiliation

Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Rostock University Medical Center, Gehlsheimer Straße 20, 18147 Neuruppin, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/s13034-019-0287-y

PMID

31249614

PMCID

PMC6587296

Abstract

There is evidence that military service increases the risk of psychosocial burden for not only service members but also their spouses and children. This meta-analysis aimed to systematically assess the association between military deployment of (at least one) parent and impact on children's mental health. For this meta-analytic review, publications were systematically searched and assessed for eligibility based on predefined inclusion criteria (studies between 2001 until 2017 involving children with at least one parent working in military services). Measurements were determined by total problem scores of the children as well as symptoms of anxiety/depression, hyperactivity/inattention, and aggressive behavior. Meta-analyses aggregated the effect sizes in random-effect models and were calculated separately for the relation between parental deployment and civilian/normative data and for the relation between parental deployment and non-deployment. Age of the children was used as moderator variable to explore any potential source of heterogeneity between studies. Parental military deployment was associated with problems in children and adolescents compared to civilian/normative samples. Significant effect sizes reached from small to moderate values; the largest effect sizes were found for overall problems and specifically for anxious/depressive symptoms and aggressive behavior. Within the military group, children of deployed parents showed more problem behavior than children of non-deployed parents, but effect sizes were small. Age of the children had no moderating effect. The results emphasize that children of military members, especially with a deployed parent, should be assessed for emotional and behavioral problems.


Language: en

Keywords

Child mental health; Meta-analysis; Military deployment

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