Deployment and combat experiences and their impact on partner substance use.

Jessica A Kulak, Jennifer Fillo, D Lynn Homish, Gregory G Homish
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Abstract

Despite burgeoning evidence of the negative effects of service experiences on service members' spouses/partners, limited research has examined these effects in the context of substance use. Additionally, a strong literature demonstrates the protective role relationship satisfaction can play for health-related outcomes. The goal of the present research is to examine relations between service experiences (i.e., deployment, combat exposure) and partner substance use, as well as how relationship satisfaction may buffer these effects. Data from 275 civilian partners were drawn from Operation: SAFETY (Soldiers And Families Excelling Through the Years), a longitudinal study examining health among US Army Reserve/National Guard (USAR/NG) soldiers and partners. Analyses examined relations between soldier service history (baseline) and civilian partner alcohol/ drug use (two-year follow-up), as well as interactions with relationship satisfaction. Models controlled for civilian partner sex and age, and soldiers' self-reported PTSD symptoms and substance use. Results revealed interactions between service experiences and partner satisfaction for models predicting alcohol consumption and heavy drinking. Higher relationship satisfaction mitigated overall alcohol consumption and heavy drinking frequency among partners of soldiers with two or more deployments, and among partners of soldiers with higher combat exposure. Soldier service experiences were unrelated to civilian partner drug use. The effects of deployment and combat exposure extend beyond the service member to negatively influence civilian partner alcohol consumption and heavy drinking, with relationship satisfaction buffering these risks. Interventions that assist USAR/NG soldiers and spouses in strengthening their relationships may also help protect against spouse substance use related to soldier service experiences.

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部署和战斗经验及其对伙伴药物使用的影响。
尽管越来越多的证据表明服役经历对服役人员的配偶/伴侣有负面影响,但在药物使用的背景下对这些影响进行的研究有限。此外,大量文献表明,关系满意度对健康相关结果具有保护作用。本研究的目的是检验服务经验(即部署,战斗暴露)与伙伴物质使用之间的关系,以及关系满意度如何缓冲这些影响。来自275名民事合作伙伴的数据来自“安全行动”(士兵和家庭多年表现出色),这是一项调查美国陆军预备役/国民警卫队(USAR/NG)士兵及其合作伙伴健康状况的纵向研究。分析检查了士兵服役史(基线)与平民伴侣酒精/药物使用(两年随访)之间的关系,以及与关系满意度的相互作用。模型控制了平民伴侣的性别和年龄,以及士兵自我报告的创伤后应激障碍症状和药物使用情况。结果揭示了服务体验和伴侣满意度之间的相互作用,用于预测酒精消费和酗酒的模型。较高的关系满意度降低了有两次或两次以上部署的士兵的伴侣以及有较多战斗经历的士兵的伴侣的总体酒精消费量和酗酒频率。军人服役经历与平民伴侣吸毒无关。部署和战斗暴露的影响超出了服役人员的范围,对平民伴侣的饮酒和酗酒产生负面影响,而关系满意度可以缓冲这些风险。帮助USAR/NG士兵和配偶加强关系的干预措施也可能有助于防止配偶使用与士兵服役经历相关的物质。
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Deployment and combat experiences and their impact on partner substance use. Military combat exposure and risk domains: assessing associations in current and former U.S. Army Reserve and National Guard Soldiers.
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