New mental health effort focuses on military families
July 23, 2010 A recent study concluded that children and youth in military families can be at a significant disadvantage compared to nonmilitary peers unless they receive appropriate mental health or other types of support when needed.
Columbia University’s National Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP) has released a report { Trauma Faced by Children of Military Families } on the negative impact of military life on the children of soldiers. Frequent moves, parent deployments, physical and psychological injuries incurred by parents in war zones, or their deaths, can leave a lifelong mark on children if not treated.
Having a parent sent to a war zone, especially on multiple deployments, impacts the entire family. This trauma in younger children may cause anxiety, excessive neediness, clinging, sadness, sleep problems or physical illnesses. Older youth may exhibit depression, angry outbursts, poor school performance, physical fights and other disruptive behavior. Continued
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