The Long War Comes Home

Publication
Article
Psychiatric TimesPsychiatric Times Vol 28 No 7
Volume 28
Issue 7

Most military families successfully adapt to a service member's deployments for military duties. Nevertheless, almost a decade of wartime stress associated with the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has presented unprecedented challenges for military families.

A key role of mental health providers is to educate communities about the impact of combat deployments on service members, veterans, and their families. Through increased awareness about multiple systems of care, a national public health response can increase awareness and education, screening and early identification, mitigation of risk and promotion of resiliency factors, and access to treat-ment for veterans and their families.

Most military families successfully adapt to a service member’s deployments for military duties.1 Nevertheless, almost a decade of wartime stress associated with the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has presented unprecedented challenges for military families.2 These families have negotiated a cycle of recurrent and prolonged deployments; faced parental absences and caregiving changes; and endured parental combat stress, safety worries, and disrupted routines.

The majority of military children appear to be functioning well despite these demands; however, increased child anxiety and behavioral changes have been identified across developmental ages.3-5 Factors that increase children’s vulnerability to these stressors include preexisting psychological disorders, past trauma, parental mental health symptoms, and cumulative deployment separation.5,6 Factors that enhance resilience include family support and positive communication.7

When wartime service members come home

In addition to deployment stressors, some service members return home with combat-related mental health problems, traumatic brain injury, or serious physical injuries. The risk of combat-related mental health problems increases during the year following return from combat and for those who have had multiple deployments. Parents-particularly younger parents with young children-who experience repeated or pro-longed deployments are at higher risk for increased marital conflict, domestic violence, and/or child maltreatment or neglect.8-10 Reunions and reintegrations are marked by an array of emotional and logistical challenges, particularly for military families facing physical or psychological injuries in a parent.

Numerous studies have described the impact of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) on families, including parenting impairment and the potential for “secondary traumatization” of spouses and children.11 Traumatized parents may have difficulty in reconnecting with family members, be overly concerned about family safety, and/or be excessively emotionally reactive. Parents with blunted emotions and reduced ability to connect emotionally with loved ones are at higher risk for marital distress and problematic parent-child relationships.12,13

Trauma reminders that trigger abrupt changes in the mood and behavior of the parent may confuse or frighten his or her children and spouse. Hypervigilance and hyperreactivity to perceived threat can lead to irritability, a rigid authoritarian parenting style, and an inability to tolerate normal family interactions (eg, children arguing or engaging in physical play).14 Families of service members with PTSD tend to be less cohesive, adaptive, and supportive.15,16 Sadly, some military families have to cope with the loss of a loved one due to combat, accidental death, or suicide.

What is already known about mitigating risk and promoting resilience in children and families of military service members?
? Studies have shown that many military families successfully adapt to a service member’s deployment, and the majority of military children appear to be functioning well despite the challenges of parental absence, caregiver changes, parental worries, and disrupted routines. Despite this, new research is emerging that indicates increasing risk of emotional and behavioral symptoms in children and spouses affected by wartime deployment. New studies suggest that risk factors for child distress include parental distress and cumulative months of deployment, and protective factors include social support and family communication.

What new information does this article provide?
? This article examines factors related to recent study findings of increases in military children’s vulnerability as well as factors that promote resilience to the stressors associated with deployment. Children face new challenges at every stage of deployment and at every developmental age; this article provides strategies for recognizing and mediating children’s signs of stress as well as for enhancing resilience in military children and families.

What are the implications for psychiatric practice?
? It is widely recognized that military children and families are resilient; however, recent studies have shown that military children are at increased risk for anxiety and behavioral changes. Findings indicate that the resilience of these children can be enhanced and the risks mediated when families receive greater education regarding deployment stress, combat-related stress, and developmental stress reactions in children as well as resiliency skills training related to emotional regulation (including traumatic stress reminder management techniques), goal setting, problem solving, and family communication.

Challenges for children during wartime

More than 1 million US children have experienced a parental combat deployment. The majority of these children are younger than 10 years; 40% are younger than 5 years. Parental deployments present an array of developmental and psychological challenges to children. Younger children may have spent their entire lives anticipating or experiencing a parent’s deployment. Feelings of loss are normal for both parent and child when a parent misses important moments in the child’s life, such as when the child learns a new skill, participates in an exciting event (eg, a school play, a prom, or a sporting event), or specific milestones (eg, graduations, birthdays).

Chronic worry about the safety of the deployed parent and the stress level of the remaining parent can take a toll. Cell phone and Internet communication with a deployed parent may assist parents and children in maintaining their relationship at a distance. Yet these same technologies may make the experience of war more immediate for the children, including an increased awareness of risk.

There are many available resources to strengthen and support children of military service members and their families. High-quality social and health care services are available to military families, particularly those living near a military base. The military community also provides a network of advocacy, information, resources, and social support. Military families often report a positive sense of mission and values that are central to their family’s identity and that provide meaning and strength. Finally, some children and parents convey that the challenge of moves and separations provides opportunities for developing new skills as children assume and master new responsibilities and contribute to the well-being of the family in meaningful ways.

Screening and identification of risk

Primary care and mental health clinicians should be attuned to common responses of children to deployment and reintegration stress. Symptoms or dysfunction in any family member should serve as an indicator of risk across the entire family. A proactive approach is recommended, with a focus on early identification and prevention as well as treatment.

Parents may notice a change in their distressed infant, such as changes in eating patterns, increased or decreased activity, impaired sleep, and/or increased crying or irritability. Separation anxiety may be exacerbated among those experiencing deployment cycle stress. Parents of distressed toddlers may notice increases in clinging behavior, changes in eating patterns, increased or decreased activity and social behavior, impaired sleep, and/or increased crying or irritability.

Young children may have confusing assumptions and misunderstandings about the deployment experience. For example, preschoolers may believe they “caused” the parent to leave but may not talk about this with anyone. Consequently, they may feel responsible and guilty without anyone knowing. In dealing with other stressors, preschool-aged children may exhibit self-soothing behaviors or distress signals that they previously used as infants or toddlers (such as thumb sucking, bed-wetting, or sleep problems). Stress-related somatic symptoms, such as functional abdominal pain, may be present. Research with preschool-aged children found that those with a deployed parent had higher levels of both internalizing and externalizing behaviors than same-aged children without a deployed parent.17

School-aged children may exhibit deployment stress symptoms in the school setting (such as attention, academic, or behavior problems) that may be misattributed to mental health problems.6,18 Like younger children, school-aged children may develop difficulties with sleep routines and may express increased worries around bedtime separations. Boys may feel a sense of responsibility for being the “man in the family” during paternal deployments.

A recent study with Army and Marine Corps families affected by wartime deployments found that about one-third of these military children had anxiety symptoms; this is significantly higher than the rate in community samples. Notably, the increased prevalence of anxiety was present both for the children currently separated from a combat-deployed parent and for those whose parents had returned from combat in the past year.5 This study also found cumulative deployment separation over the child’s lifetime to be a risk factor for greater psychological distress in school-aged children. Psychological distress among both active duty and non–active duty parents, including depression and PTSD symptoms, also correlated with the child’s symptoms.

Similar to younger school-aged children, adolescents with deployed parents may exhibit anger, defiance, or aloofness.6 Like their younger counterparts, teens had greater psychological stress when the caregiving parent had greater cumulative deployment separation and psychological distress.4 Teens with strong coping skills may derive meaning and satisfaction from assuming additional family responsibilities and providing support to others. Teens with less effective coping skills may isolate themselves and/or become resentful of the additional burdens associated with parental deployment. Positive family communication appears to buffer distress in military teens and their families.7

Mental health strategy for clinicians

The level of exposure to sustained sacrifice and stress, and the scope of the population affected by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, indicate the need for a public mental health response for our military families that includes a tiered approach to early identification, prevention, and treatment services. The objective of preventive interventions is the reduction of disease or disorder by using programs designed for those who may be at greatest risk.

Preventive mental health strategies provided within a strength-based framework of psychological resiliency are consistent with military culture and training. Such interventions promote psychological health and reduce distress by building on family strengths and encouraging the regular use of adaptive coping behaviors to reach desired goals. An example of this type of program is FOCUS (Families OverComing Under Stress), which was developed at the University of California, Los Angeles, and Harvard University for military families facing wartime deployments.

Currently being implemented as a large-scale service project through the US Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, FOCUS family resiliency training is a strength-based, trauma-informed, preventive intervention for military families and is designed to promote resiliency and mitigate the impact of wartime deployment stress.19 It provides parents and children with training that addresses the impact of wartime deployment and helps them learn emotional regulation and communication and problem-solving skills to address their specific challenges. Early evaluation of this program indicates that parents and children who participated in FOCUS experienced significant improvement in emotional and behavioral adjustment.20

Lessons from FOCUS provide guidance for clinicians, such as the following interventions to consider when working with military families:

• Education regarding family deployment stress, combat-related psychological stress, and developmental stress reactions in children

• Resiliency skills training related to emotional regulation (including traumatic stress reminder management techniques), goal setting, problem solving, and family communication

In FOCUS, a deployment time line and family narrative framework are used to increase family understanding, communication, support, and cohesion. An essential component of family-based treatment lies in developing and strengthening skills that support parental leadership and positive parent-child interactions in the face of heightened stress.

Parents benefit from information about typical child development, expected emotional and behavioral reactions of children to stressful situations, and ways to mitigate the effects of deployments on children. For example, parents can be reminded to help infants by providing a calm, consistent environment. Likewise, they can help toddlers feel protected by providing a predictable routine and additional attention when one parent is deployed.

Preschoolers benefit from repeated explanations of a parent’s departure and separation, along with assurances that the separation is not the child’s fault. If a child regresses to past behaviors, parents can recognize this as a sign of distress. Efforts designed to increase self-sufficiency, reduce stress, and increase emotional support may be effective. School-aged children sometimes need encouragement to express themselves and reassurance that it is acceptable to feel sad and cry. Parents can support emotional awareness and regulation through modeling communication and effective coping regarding their own reactions to stress.

During deployments, concrete representations of the deployed parent and of the parent-child relationship (maps, transitional objects, images) are helpful and provide opportunities for communication about the context and meaning of the separation. Strategies that support the deployed parent’s participation in the child’s life enhance the parent-child relationship. If possible, it is helpful for the deployed parent to send regular messages to each child (separate letters or sections of audio tapes or videotape). Calendars, schedules, plans for communication, and other orienting tools can help the child perceive a sense of time left until a family reunion.

Encouraging children to engage in an activity or hobby they enjoy and do well can enhance their self-sufficiency and provide social support. Regular family communication should be a goal of all parents. Discussions about how things might be different when the family is reunited are often overlooked; however, the family is encouraged to have these discussions before and during reintegration. Topics may include how family roles have changed, meaningful interim experiences, and ways in which the children have matured. It may be helpful to plan time to become reacquainted with each other.

The monitoring and regulation of emotional states and related behaviors can be used to identify daily fluctuations in feelings, including stress reactions. A feeling thermometer can help families monitor their emotional states and the effectiveness of the strategies they use to lower their emotional distress. Key emotions to monitor include anger, sadness, guilt, shame, and anxiety/fear. It is then possible to identify internal and external reminders that contribute to these emotional reactions and escalations of distress and discuss how these responses affect interpersonal behavior in the family. For example, a parent may come to see how his combat-related hypervigilance leads to an overly authoritarian parenting style and increased family conflict.

Coping strategies for parents typically include communicating with other family members when they are experiencing a stress reminder; developing a plan for how family members can respond supportively; and practicing ways, such as relaxation or distraction techniques, to alter arousal and unhelpful reactions when they are triggered or while in potentially triggering situations.

References:

References

1. Weins TW, Boss P. Maintaining family resiliency before, during, and after military separation. In: Castro CA, Adler AB, Britt CA, eds. Military Life: The Psychology of Serving in Peace and Combat. Vol 3. Bridgeport, CT: Praeger Security International; 2006:13-38.

2. Waldrep DA, Cozza SJ, Chun RS. The impact of deployment on the military family. In: The Iraq War Clinician Guide. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: Department of Veterans Affairs; 2004:83-86.

3. Flake EM, Davis BE, Johnson PL, Middleton LS. The psychosocial effects of deployment on military children. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2009;30:271-278.

4. Chandra A, Lara-Cinisomo S, Jaycox LH, et al. Children on the homefront: the experience of children from military families. Pediatrics. 2010;125:16-25.

5. Lester P, Peterson K, Reeves J, et al. The long war and parental combat deployment: effects on military children and at-home spouses. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2010;49:310-320.

6. Lincoln A, Swift E, Shorteno-Fraser M. Psychological adjustment and treatment of children and families with parents deployed in military combat. J Clin Psychol. 2008;64:984-992.

7. Chandra A, Lara-Cinisomo S, Jaycox LH, et al. Views From the Homefront: The Experiences of Youth and Spouses From Military Families. Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation; 2011.

8. Gibbs DA, Martin SL, Kupper LL, Johnson RE. Child maltreatment in enlisted soldiers’ families during combat-related deployments. JAMA. 2007;298:528-535.

9. Rentz ED, Marshall SW, Loomis D, et al. Effects of deployment on the occurrence of child maltreatment in military and nonmilitary families. Am J Epidemiol. 2007;165:1199-1206.
10. McCarroll JE, Fan Z, Newby JH, Ursano RJ. Trends in US army child maltreatment reports: 1990-2004. Child Abuse Rev. 2008;17(2):108-118.

11. Galovski TE, Lyons J. The psychological sequelae of exposure to combat violence: a review of the impact on the veteran’s family. Aggress Viol Behav. 2004;9:477-501.

12. Riggs DS, Byrne CA, Weathers FW, Litz BT. The quality of the intimate relationships of male Vietnam veterans: problems associated with posttraumatic stress disorder. J Trauma Stress. 1998;11:87-101.

13. Ruscio AM, Weathers FW, King LA, King DW. Male war-zone veterans’ perceived relationships with their children: the importance of emotional numbing. J Trauma Stress. 2002;15:351-357.

14. Matsakis A. Vietnam Wives: Women and Children Surviving Life With Veterans Suffering Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Kensington, MD: Woodbine House; 1988.

15. Westerink J, Giarratano L. The impact of posttraumatic stress disorder on partners and children of Australian Vietnam veterans. Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 1999;33:841-847.

16. Davidson AC, Mellor DJ. The adjustment of children of Australian Vietnam veterans: is there evidence for the transgenerational transmission of the effects of war-related trauma? Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2001;35:345-351.

17. Chartrand MM, Frank DA, White LF, Shope TR. Effect of parents’ wartime deployment on the behavior of young children in military families. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2008;162:1009-1014.

18. Murray JS. Helping children cope with separation during war. J Spec Pediatr Nurs. 2002;7:127-130.

19. Lester P, Mogil C, Saltzman W, et al. Families overcoming under stress: implementing family-centered prevention for military families facing wartime deployments and combat operational stress. Mil Med. 2011;176:19-25.

20. Lester P, Saltzman WR, Woodward K, et al. Evaluation of a family centered prevention intervention for military children and families facing wartime deployments. Am J Public Health. In press.

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