The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study

As part of an ethnographic study, the impact of foreign postings on spouses who accompany military personnel was explored. Individual interviews and focus groups with 34 British military spouses based in one location in southern Europe were conducted. Key findings suggested that reaction to a foreig...

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Main Authors: Gillian Blakely, Catherine Hennessy, Man C. Chung, Heather Skirton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Medical Publishing 2014-08-01
Series:Health Psychology Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/hpr/article/view/1468
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spelling doaj-5499a0d3b614400c99511e1bc5e3657c2021-05-02T20:30:50ZengOpen Medical PublishingHealth Psychology Research2281-20752420-81242014-08-012210.4081/hpr.2014.14683812The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic studyGillian Blakely0Catherine Hennessy1Man C. Chung2Heather Skirton3Faculty of Health, and Human Sciences, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Plymouth UniversityFaculty of Health, and Human Sciences, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Plymouth UniversityDepartment of Psychology, Natural Science and Public Health, Zayed University, DubaiFaculty of Health, and Human Sciences, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Plymouth UniversityAs part of an ethnographic study, the impact of foreign postings on spouses who accompany military personnel was explored. Individual interviews and focus groups with 34 British military spouses based in one location in southern Europe were conducted. Key findings suggested that reaction to a foreign posting was a reflection of personal attitudes, prior experiences, support, ability to adjust to change and strength of relationship with the serving spouse and community. For many the experience was positive due to the increased opportunity for family time, for others this helped to compensate for the difficulties experienced. Some military spouses experienced significant distress on the posting, particularly if the family was not well-supported. The potential implications of military spouses not adapting to foreign postings have significant implications for healthcare practice. Provision of more appropriate support resources before and during the posting would facilitate the transition for the military spouse and their family.http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/hpr/article/view/1468health professionals, international relocation, overseas, spouses, wellbeing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gillian Blakely
Catherine Hennessy
Man C. Chung
Heather Skirton
spellingShingle Gillian Blakely
Catherine Hennessy
Man C. Chung
Heather Skirton
The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study
Health Psychology Research
health professionals, international relocation, overseas, spouses, wellbeing
author_facet Gillian Blakely
Catherine Hennessy
Man C. Chung
Heather Skirton
author_sort Gillian Blakely
title The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study
title_short The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study
title_full The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study
title_fullStr The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study
title_full_unstemmed The impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study
title_sort impact of foreign postings on accompanying military spouses: an ethnographic study
publisher Open Medical Publishing
series Health Psychology Research
issn 2281-2075
2420-8124
publishDate 2014-08-01
description As part of an ethnographic study, the impact of foreign postings on spouses who accompany military personnel was explored. Individual interviews and focus groups with 34 British military spouses based in one location in southern Europe were conducted. Key findings suggested that reaction to a foreign posting was a reflection of personal attitudes, prior experiences, support, ability to adjust to change and strength of relationship with the serving spouse and community. For many the experience was positive due to the increased opportunity for family time, for others this helped to compensate for the difficulties experienced. Some military spouses experienced significant distress on the posting, particularly if the family was not well-supported. The potential implications of military spouses not adapting to foreign postings have significant implications for healthcare practice. Provision of more appropriate support resources before and during the posting would facilitate the transition for the military spouse and their family.
topic health professionals, international relocation, overseas, spouses, wellbeing
url http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/hpr/article/view/1468
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