青少年复原力研究(SOAR):研究方案

Karen Tannenbaum, H. McMaster
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引用次数: 0

摘要

青少年时期是与军队有联系的青少年成长过程中的一个特别敏感的时期,因为他们的社会情感和身体都会在其父母的军事生涯背景下发生变化。与平民青少年相比,与军队有联系的青少年面临着独特的压力,如军队搬迁、父母因部署和训练而不在身边,以及父母因军队而造成的身体和精神伤害。这些压力可能会改变家庭动态,破坏社会支持网络,从而对青少年的健康和幸福产生持久影响。目前,人们对这一代与军队有联系的青少年在身心健康、学业成绩、教育或职业抱负方面的情况知之甚少。作为拜登-哈里斯政府对军人家庭承诺的一部分,美国国防部承诺通过支持 "青少年复原力研究"(SOAR)来填补这些重大知识空白。SOAR的纵向设计为评估军人家庭生活对青少年成年后福祉的影响提供了强有力的工具。SOAR被纳入规模更大的 "千年队列研究"(Millennium Cohort Study)中,该研究是美国首个以人口为基础的前瞻性研究,旨在调查现役军人服兵役对健康的长期影响。近 40,000 名有青少年子女的千禧队列参与者受邀完成了一项基于网络的自我报告调查,其中包括人际关系、社会环境和健康等领域的项目。军人父母提供转介信息,让他们的青少年子女和另一位主要父母(如果有的话)受邀参加 SOAR。通过这种方法,可以将这三个家庭成员(军人、配偶和青少年)之间的调查数据联系起来,从而促进以家庭系统为基础,全面了解与军队有关联的青少年的经历以及健康、风险和复原力的决定因素。研究结果将阐明军队生活对青少年的持久影响,以及军队特定经历与社会心理健康和幸福之间的关联性质。此外,这项研究还将评估可改变的风险和保护因素,这些因素可能会阐明与军队有关联的青少年在社会心理发展和身体健康、学业成绩以及教育和军事职业抱负方面随时间推移而产生的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Study of Adolescent Resilience (SOAR): a research protocol
Adolescence is a particularly sensitive period of development for military-connected youth, given the socioemotional and physical changes that occur against the backdrop of the military career of their parent(s). Military-connected adolescents face unique stressors relative to their civilian counterparts, such as military relocations, parental absence due to deployments and trainings, and parental military-related physical and mental injury. These stressors may change family dynamics and disrupt social support networks, which can have lasting implications for adolescent health and well-being. At present, very little is known about how the current generation of military-connected adolescents are faring regarding their psychological and physical health, academic achievement, and educational or career aspirations. As part of the Biden-Harris Administration's commitment to military families, the U.S. Department of Defense pledged to address these major knowledge gaps by supporting the Study of Adolescent Resilience (SOAR). SOAR's longitudinal design provides a powerful tool for evaluating the effects of military family life on adolescent well-being into early adulthood.SOAR is embedded within the larger Millennium Cohort Study, the first U.S. population-based prospective study to investigate long-term health effects of military service among active duty service members. Nearly 40,000 Millennium Cohort participants with adolescent children were invited to complete a web-based self-report survey that included items across interpersonal, socioenvironmental, and health domains, among others. Military parents provided referral information for their adolescent child and another primary parental figure, when available, to be invited to SOAR. This approach allowed survey data to be linked between these three family members (service member, spouse, and adolescent) to promote a comprehensive, family systems-based understanding of military-connected adolescent experiences and determinants of health, risk, and resilience.Research findings will shed light on the enduring impact of military life on adolescents and the nature of associations between military-specific experiences and psychosocial health and well-being. Further, this research will assess modifiable risk and protective factors that may elucidate differences in military-connected adolescent psychosocial development and physical health, academic achievement, and educational and military career aspirations over time.Findings gleaned from this research will be used to inform existing policy and programs designed to promote adolescent resilience.
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