• Title of article

    DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND DEPLOYMENT IN US ARMY SOLDIERS

  • Author/Authors

    Ph.D.، JAMES E. MCCARROLL, نويسنده , , M.D.، ROBERT J. URSANO, نويسنده , , D.S.W.، JOHN H. NEWBY, نويسنده , , Ph.D.، XIAN LIU, نويسنده , , Ph.D.، CAROL S. FULLERTON, نويسنده , , M.D.، ANN E. NORWOOD, نويسنده , , M.D.، ELIZABETH A. OSUCH, نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    -2
  • From page
    3
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Although military deployment has been suggested as a possible cause of increases in domestic violence, little is known about it. The purpose of this study was to determine if deployment of 6 months to Bosnia predicted early postdeployment domestic violence. Active duty recently deployed (N = 313) and nondeployed (N = 712) male soldiers volunteered to take an anonymous questionnaire. Deployment was not a significant predictor of postdeployment domestic violence. However, younger soldiers, those with predeployment domestic violence, nonwhite race, and off-post residence also were more likely to report postdeployment domestic violence. The predicted probability of postdeployment domestic violence for a deployed 20-year-old, nonwhite soldier with a history of predeployment domestic violence and who lives on-post was .20. For the soldier without a history of predeployment domestic violence, it was .05. Prevention and intervention programs for postdeployment domestic violence shortly after return should target age and persons with a domestic violence history rather than deployment per se.
  • Keywords
    magnetic resonance imaging , Alzheimers disease , Downs syndrome
  • Journal title
    Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
  • Record number

    67925