| Literature DB >> 30443263 |
Victoria Williamson1, Sharon A M Stevelink1, Eve Da Silva1, Nicola T Fear1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children in military families have uniquely different childhood experiences compared to their civilian peers, including a parent in employment and a stable familial income, frequent relocations, indirect exposure to and awareness of conflict, and extended separation from parents or siblings due to deployment. However, whether children from military families have poorer wellbeing than non-military connected children is not well understood.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Military; Parent; Sibling; Systematic review; Wellbeing
Year: 2018 PMID: 30443263 PMCID: PMC6220523 DOI: 10.1186/s13034-018-0252-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health ISSN: 1753-2000 Impact factor: 3.033
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow chart
Included studies sample characteristics, methods of assessment, and quality ratings
| Study | Design |
| Males (%) | Child ethnicity (%) | Child age or school grade | Outcomes assessed | Quality rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acion et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 57,637 | 49.3 | 85.9 | 6th, 8th, 11th grade | Alcohol/drug use in last 30 days | Good |
| Deployed 1758 | |||||||
| Barnes et al. [ | Longitudinal | Civilian 53 | 51.7 | 25.6 | Stress, PTSD | Good | |
| Military parent 59 | |||||||
| Deployed 21 | |||||||
| Cederbaum et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 12,385 | 48.1 | 28.3 | 7th, 9th, 11th grade | Suicidal ideation, positive affect, depression | Fair |
| Military parent 1305 | |||||||
| Military sibling 609 | |||||||
| Gilreath et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 12,555 | 47.9 | 28.2 | 7th, 9th, 11th grade | Alcohol/drug use in last 30 days | Good |
| Military parent 1338 | |||||||
| Military sibling 619 | |||||||
| Gilreath et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 283,593 | 49.1 | 23.5 | 9–11th grade | Suicidal ideation | Good |
| Military parent 27,547 | |||||||
| Reed et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 8237 | 57.2 | N/A | 8th, 10th, 12th grade | Quality of life, depression, suicidal ideation | Good |
| Military parent 1216 | |||||||
| Deployed 557 | |||||||
| Reed et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 9978 | 56.0 | 60.5 | 8th, 10th, 12th grade | Binge drinking over last 2 weeks, drug use in last 30 days, externalising behaviour | Good |
| Military parent 1210 | |||||||
| Deployed 554 | |||||||
| Reinhardt et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 3370 | 49.6 | 36.0 | 9–12th grade | Externalising behaviour | Good |
| Military parent 539 | |||||||
| Sullivan et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Civilian 634,029 | 49.6 | 21.4 | 7th, 9th, 11th grade | Externalising behaviour, alcohol/drug use in last 30 days | Good |
| Military parent 54,684 |
N = total number of child participants. Child ethnicity is reported as percentage Caucasian children. Males = the percentage of male children in the study. Military parent/sibling = child reports having a primary caregiver or sibling in the armed forces. Deployed = child reports that parent/sibling has been deployed to a combat zone. N/A not available, M mean, SD standard deviation. Adjustment difficulties measured = type of child psychological difficulty assessed by the study and included in the analysis. Quality rating score: studies meeting criteria for items three, eleven and fourteen on the NIH [25] study quality checklist received a score of ‘good.’ A study that met criteria on two of three items received a quality rating score of ‘fair.’ A study that met one or none of these items received a score of ‘poor.’ All studies assessed child wellbeing using self-report questionnaires
aData from the state-wide California Healthy Kids Survey (CHKS) was used. Cederbaum et al. [31] reported CHKS data from children recruited during 2011. Gilreath et al. [15] reported CHKS data from a sub-sample of children recruited during February–March 2011 from schools in southern California. Gilreath et al. [29] used CHKS data from children recruited between 2012 and 2013. Sullivan et al. [27] reported CHKS data collected during March–April 2013
bData from the Washington State 2008 Healthy Youth Survey (HYS) was used. Reed et al. [14] reported on HYS data collected in 2008, with data regarding suicidal ideation and poor quality of life used for the present study. Reed et al. [26] reported HYS data collected in 2008 with data regarding child violent behaviour and substance use used for the present study
Externalising behaviour in military and non-military connected children
| Study | Physical fighting | Carrying a weapon | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reinhardt et al. [ | AOR Overall (95% CI) | 1.69* (1.27, 2.25) | |||
| Parent military | |||||
| Male AOR (95% CI) | 1.74* (1.15, 2.65) | ||||
| Female AOR (95% CI) | 1.65* (1.11, 2.45) | ||||
| Sullivan et al. [ | AOR Overall (95% CI) | 1.67* (1.62, 1.71) | 1.90* (1.83, 1.97) | ||
CI confidence interval, AOR adjusted odds ratio. For AOR the reference category was children of civilian parents. Male and female refers to the gender of the child
* Confidence intervals indicate a statistically significant odds or adjusted odds ratio
aAOR adjusted for sex, race/ethnicity, grade, location substance use, depressive symptoms, and bullying victimization
bAOR adjusted for sex, race/ethnicity and grade
cAOR adjusted for race/ethnicity, grade, maternal education, academic achievement, binge drinking, drug use and media use. Reinhardt et al. [30] assessed violent behaviour using the following item: “how many times were you in a physical fight in the last 12 months?”. Reed et al. [26] assessed violent behaviour using the following items: “during the past 12 months how many times were you in a fight on school property?” and “during the past 30 days, how many times did you carry a weapon, such as a gun, knife or club on school property?”. Sullivan et al. [27] assessed in-school violent behaviour with items including: “during the past 12 months, how many times on school property have you been in a fight?”, “during the past 12 months, how many times on school property have you carried a gun?”, and “during the past 12 months, how many times on school property have you carried any other weapon (such as a knife or club)?”
dDifference between military and deployed significant at p < 0.05
Substance use in military and non-military connected children
| Study | Alcohol | Other drugs | Tobacco | Marijuana | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acion et al. [ | OR (95% CI) | 1.67* (1.49, 1.87) | 3.52* (2.99, 4.14) | 2.19* (1.87, 2.58) | |||
| Gilreath et al. [ | Parent military OR (95% CI) | 0.91 (0.79, 1.04) | 1.28* (1.04, 1.57) | 1.04 (0.85, 1.29) | 0.96 (0.81, 1.13) | ||
| Sibling military OR (95% CI) | 1.18c (0.98, 1.43) | 1.00 (0.72, 1.38) | 1.19 (0.89, 1.58) | 1.09 (0.87, 1.37) | |||
| Sullivan et al. [ | AOR Overall (95% CI) | 1.50* (1.46, 1.55) | 1.73* (1.66, 1.80) | 1.59* (1.53, 1.66) | 1.45* (1.40, 1.50) |
AOR adjusted odds ratio, OR unadjusted odds ratios. For OR and AOR the reference category was children of civilian parents. CI confidence intervals
* Confidence intervals indicate a statistically significant odds or adjusted odds ratio
aAOR adjusted for sex, race/ethnicity and grade
bAlcohol consumption is a measure of self-reported binge drinking over the last 2 weeks, all other studies assessed substance use in the last 30 days
cDifference between parent military and sibling military significant at p < 0.05
dDifference between military and deployed significant at p < 0.05
Mental health in military and non-military connected youth
| Study | Depression | Suicidal ideation | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cederbaum et al. [ | Parent military AOR Overall (95% CI) | 0.90 (0.81, 1.01) | 1.10 (0.88, 1.38) | ||
| Sibling military AOR Overall (95% CI) | 1.13 (0.94, 1.36) | 1.21 (0.98, 1.48) | |||
| Gilreath et al. [ | AOR (95% CI) | 1.43* (1.37, 1.49) |
AOR adjusted odds ratio. The reference category for the adjusted odds ratio was children of civilian parents. CI confidence intervals, PTSD posttraumatic stress disorder, M mean, SD standard deviation
* Confidence intervals indicate a statistically significant odds or adjusted odds ratio
aAOR adjusted for study design
bAOR adjusted for grade, sex, and race/ethnicity
cAOR adjusted for race/ethnicity, grade, maternal education, academic achievement, binge drinking, and drug use
dDifference between military and deployed significant at p < 0.05
Quality of life in military and non-military connected youth
| Study | Quality of life | Positive affect | Stress |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barnes et al. [ | Civilian | 22.5 (0.56) | |
| Parent military | 23.4 (0.78) | ||
| Parent deployed | 28.0 (4.42) | ||
| Cederbaum et al. [ | Parent military AOR Overall (95% CI) | 0.79 (0.67, 0.94) | |
| Sibling military AOR Overall (95% CI) | 0.91 (0.69, 1.21) |
AOR adjusted odds ratio. The reference category for the adjusted odds ratio was children of civilian parents. M mean, SD standard deviation, CI confidence intervals
* Confidence intervals indicate a statistically significant odds or adjusted odds ratio
aScore reflects child self-reported mean score on the Psychosocial Resources Scale on May 15th and 16th 2003 at the declaration of the end of “major hostilities” of Operation Iraqi Freedom
bAOR adjusted for study design
cAOR adjusted for race/ethnicity, grade, maternal education, academic achievement, binge drinking, and drug use. Poor quality of life assessed via Youth Quality of Life Instrument Surveillance Version (e.g. “I feel alone in my life”; [36])
dDifference between military and deployed significant at p < 0.05