Abstract
Given the unprecedented operational tempo of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars and the heavy involvement of the Reserve and National
Guard, the stress that military families are exposed to is distinct from stress in earlier conflicts, with little empirical
data to inform the impact on non-deployed military caregivers or “home caregivers.” The study seeks to examine the experiences
of home caregivers during deployments, with a focus on the impact of deployment on the caregiver’s well-being. We conducted
50 qualitative interviews and 1,337 survey interviews with home caregivers who experienced at least one deployment. The structured
qualitative interview focused on caregiver experiences during deployment. The quantitative data centered on caregiver well-being
and household and relationship hassles. The qualitative interview notes were the unit of analysis and traditional methods
were used to analyze the data. The quantitative data were analyzed using regression models. The qualitative data revealed
key deployment-related household challenges that caregivers experience and the effect of those challenges on caregivers. Multivariate
analyses of the quantitative data explored differences in caregivers’ emotional well-being, household and relationship hassles.
The results showed important component and deployment experience differences. Caregivers affiliated with the National Guard
and those with more months of deployment reported significantly poorer emotional well-being, and more household and relationship
hassles. Given the important role that maternal well-being has on child and family functioning, it is critical to understand
how the stress of deployment is affecting mothers in their daily routines, especially during potentially high stress periods.
Guard, the stress that military families are exposed to is distinct from stress in earlier conflicts, with little empirical
data to inform the impact on non-deployed military caregivers or “home caregivers.” The study seeks to examine the experiences
of home caregivers during deployments, with a focus on the impact of deployment on the caregiver’s well-being. We conducted
50 qualitative interviews and 1,337 survey interviews with home caregivers who experienced at least one deployment. The structured
qualitative interview focused on caregiver experiences during deployment. The quantitative data centered on caregiver well-being
and household and relationship hassles. The qualitative interview notes were the unit of analysis and traditional methods
were used to analyze the data. The quantitative data were analyzed using regression models. The qualitative data revealed
key deployment-related household challenges that caregivers experience and the effect of those challenges on caregivers. Multivariate
analyses of the quantitative data explored differences in caregivers’ emotional well-being, household and relationship hassles.
The results showed important component and deployment experience differences. Caregivers affiliated with the National Guard
and those with more months of deployment reported significantly poorer emotional well-being, and more household and relationship
hassles. Given the important role that maternal well-being has on child and family functioning, it is critical to understand
how the stress of deployment is affecting mothers in their daily routines, especially during potentially high stress periods.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-11
- DOI 10.1007/s10995-011-0772-2
- Authors
- Sandraluz Lara-Cinisomo, UNC Charlotte/RAND Corporation, Charlotte, NC, USA
- Anita Chandra, RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, USA
- Rachel M. Burns, RAND Corporation, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
- Lisa H. Jaycox, RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, USA
- Terri Tanielian, RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, USA
- Teague Ruder, RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, USA
- Bing Han, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, USA
- Journal Maternal and Child Health Journal
- Online ISSN 1573-6628
- Print ISSN 1092-7875