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				Support Helps Children Cope With Deployments(March 15, 2010)
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					| WASHINGTON, March 10, 2010 – Children with a strong 
					nondeployed parent or caregiver and a solid support system 
					have a better ability to cope with deployments, two recent 
					studies have shown. 
 Anita Chandra, a behavioral scientist from Rand Corp., and 
					Leonard Wong, a research professor from the Army War 
					College, highlighted the findings of these studies during 
					testimony to the House Armed Services Committee yesterday. 
					Both studies focused on military children ages 11 to 17.
 
 “We had a very strong relationship between the caregiver's 
					mental health and their ability to cope as well as the 
					ability for their children to handle some of the deployment 
					stressors,” said Chandra, describing the findings of the 
					study “Children on the Homefront: The Experiences of 
					Children From Military Families.”
 
 This independent study included more than 1,500 military 
					families, focusing on the well-being of youth ages 11 to 17 
					and their nondeployed parent or caregiver.
 
 The study's goal was to show how children from military 
					families function with respect to academics, peer and family 
					relations, general emotional difficulties and overall 
					problem behaviors, Chandra explained. The study found that, 
					when compared to a sample of U.S. children, military 
					children have a higher average rate of emotional 
					difficulties at each age, she said.
 
 Older children and girls, particularly, had a greater number 
					of difficulties during deployment, she noted. And the total 
					months the parent was deployed, rather than the number of 
					deployments, was related to a greater number of challenges 
					as well, she added.
 
 Relating to family strength, “we found that caregivers with 
					poorer mental health themselves reported more child 
					difficulties during deployment,” Chandra said.
 
 Chandra suggested that families may benefit from targeted 
					support to deal with stressors at later points in the 
					deployment, and not simply during initial stages. And, 
					“families in which nondeployed caregivers are struggling 
					with their own mental health may need more support for both 
					caregiver and child,” she said.
 
 Wong also found a strong connection between family strength 
					and children's ability to cope with deployment in the Army 
					study, “The Effects of Multiple Deployments on Army 
					Adolescents.”
 
 For the study, an anonymous, Web-based survey was issued to 
					a random sample of more than 2,000 active-duty soldiers, as 
					well as to more than 700 Army spouses and about 550 military 
					children between ages 11 and 17. The study focused on what 
					factors might influence the magnitude of stress related to 
					deployments, he said.
 
 Wong found that the No. 1 factor in mitigating deployment 
					stress was a child's participation in activities, such as 
					sports, followed by a strong family foundation. Activities 
					serve “as a distraction to the negative feelings associated 
					with a deployment,” he explained.
 
 Another, unexpected predictor of deployment stress was a 
					child's belief that the American public supports the war, he 
					said.
 
 “Sports as a diversion for deployment stress, that makes 
					sense and youth sports programs are relatively easy to 
					create,” he said. “But that the strength of a child's 
					perception of the American support for the war would be 
					associated with their deployment stress was a surprise, and 
					it's a much more complex issue to deal with.”
 
 In addition to looking at what factors influence the 
					magnitude of stress, the study also examined how well 
					adolescents coped with deployments overall. Along with the 
					previous factors such as strong families, activities and a 
					child's belief that America supports the war, the largest 
					predictor of stress was a child's belief that the soldier is 
					making a difference in the world.
 
 This finding is surprising, yet intuitive, Wong noted. 
					“These children understand that the Army is a ‘greedy' 
					institution demanding all of time, energy and focus of a 
					soldier,” he said. “They also understand from personal 
					experience that the family is a greedy institution that 
					requires constant attention and care.
 
 “They see deployed soldiers caught in the middle of both 
					noble institutions,” he added.
 
 Looking ahead, Wong noted the importance of building strong 
					families and focusing on activities such as sports to help 
					mitigate stress. A child's belief system, however, may be a 
					more complicated factor to tackle, he said. “The factors of 
					the children's beliefs, what they feel about the Army, what 
					they feel about the nation, make a difference,” Wong said. 
					“And so how do you influence a child's beliefs? That's a 
					critical question and that will have us thinking for a long 
					time.”
 
 While the studies are useful, more work remains to be done 
					on behalf of military children, Chandra said.
 
 “Both of our studies really point to the needs of older 
					youth,” she said. “What we hope from this work is that it 
					starts to identify some of the needs of older youth and 
					teenagers so we that can look at the programs we currently 
					have and try and figure out if we are aligning our programs 
					with those needs, particularly with adolescents, and 
					particularly those older adolescents.
 
 “Despite the contributions of previous studies, significant 
					knowledge gaps remain, especially for older children,” she 
					added.
 |  | By Elaine Wilson American Forces Press Service
 Copyright 2010
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