Background: More than 40% of children in military families are <6 years old, a period when children are most dependent on their parents' physical and emotional availability.
Purpose: This systematic review describes the impact of deployment since 9/11 on the mental health of military families with young children, evaluates evidence-based interventions for military parents with young children, and identifies gaps in the science limiting our ability to support the needs of these families.
Methods: Databases were reviewed from 2001 to 2014 using preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses approach; 26 studies met review criteria.
Results: Deployment was associated with increased parent stress, child behavior problems, health care utilization, and child maltreatment. Few studies tested interventions or focused on racial/ethnic minority or veteran families. A number of methodological limitations are noted.
Conclusions: More research using multiple methods, stronger designs, and more diverse samples is needed to understand and address the needs of military families with young children.
Keywords: Child mental health; Health disparities; Mental health; Military families; Parenting; Review of literature; Systematic review; Veteran; Young children.
Copyright © 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.