Mental Health of Canadian Children Growing Up in Military Families: The Child Perspective

Ashley Williams, H. Cramm, S. Khalid-Khan, Pappu Reddy, D. Groll, L. Rühland, Shannon Hill
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

A recent scoping review indicated military-connected children face stressors that may increase mental health issues. However, the majority of the included literature was American. To examine the experiences of Canadian military-connected children, we conducted in-depth interviews with a purposive sample of Canadian military-connected youth using a qualitative description approach. We conducted a content analysis on interview data, supported by qualitative data analysis software (MAXQDA), with coding done by two researchers who met regularly to discuss coding agreement. Thirteen children in military families participated and described the mental health impact of frequent mobility, parental absence, and risk of parental injury. The experiences of our participants were consistent with the results of an earlier scoping review on this topic. Our results suggest improving military cultural competence among health care providers and enhancing parental support may positively impact child well-being. More research is needed to understand resilience and vulnerability among Canadian military-connected children.
加拿大军人家庭儿童的心理健康:儿童视角
最近的一项范围审查表明,与军队有关的儿童面临的压力可能会增加心理健康问题。然而,大多数纳入的文献是美国的。为了研究加拿大与军方有联系的儿童的经历,我们使用定性描述方法对加拿大与军方有联系的青年进行了深入访谈。我们对访谈数据进行内容分析,采用定性数据分析软件(MAXQDA)进行支持,由两位研究者进行编码,并定期会面讨论编码协议。13名军人家庭的儿童参与并描述了频繁流动、父母缺席和父母受伤风险对心理健康的影响。我们参与者的经验与早期关于这个主题的范围审查的结果是一致的。我们的研究结果表明,提高医疗服务提供者的军事文化能力和加强父母的支持可能会对儿童健康产生积极的影响。需要更多的研究来了解加拿大与军方有关的儿童的复原力和脆弱性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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