6301 wk 5 assgn

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Annotated Outline

SOCW 6301: Social Work Practice Research I

Dr. Katherine Leith, PhD, LMSW

Annotated Outline

I. Introduction

A. Military families dealing with deployments and addiction.

B. How do military deployments affect military families including children,

parents, and service members regarding addictions to alcohol and/or

substance use, after deployment?

II. Addiction within military families

A. What are the influences that contribute to addiction (Kulak, Fillo, Homish, Kahn, & Homish, 2019)?

1. The stressors that families go through (Kulak, Fillo, Homish, Kahn, & Homish, 2019).

2. Changes that the families are going through (Kulak, Fillo, Homish, Kahn, & Homish, 2019).

B. The effects of addiction on a family and a client (Kulak, Fillo, Homish, Kahn, & Homish, 2019).

1. Effects on the family including the children including mental health (Kulak, Fillo, Homish, Kahn, & Homish, 2019).

2. Effects on the client (Kulak, Fillo, Homish, Kahn, & Homish, 2019).

III. Violence and neglect connected to addiction (Cancio, 2021).

A. Violence within the family (Cancio, 2021).

1. Intimate Partner Violence (Cancio, 2021).

2. Children witnessing IPV (Cancio, 2021).

B. Neglect within the household due to addiction (Cozza et al, 2018).

1. Child neglect (Cozza et al, 2018).

2. Educational and Medical neglect (Cozza et al, 2018).

IV. Intervention (Vincenze, McMahon, Lange, & Forziat-Pytel, 2019)

A. Does intervention work (Vincenze, McMahon, Lange, & Forziat-Pytel, 2019).

1. Interventions with the family (Vincenze, McMahon, Lange, & Forziat-Pytel, 2019).

2. Intervention with the client (Vincenze, McMahon, Lange, & Forziat-Pytel, 2019).

B. Is there a possibility of intervention doing more hurt (Vincenze, McMahon, Lange, & Forziat-Pytel, 2019)?

1. Treatment can be stressful (Price, Noulas, Wen, & Spray, 2019).

2. Telehealth as an option to help those who need privacy (Price, Noulas, Wen, & Spray, 2019).

V. Conclusion

A. How do military deployments affect military families including children,

parents, and service members regarding addictions to alcohol and/or

substance use, after deployment?

B. Going over addiction within military families, the violence and neglect connected to addiction, and intervention.

C. Addiction affects families dealing with deployment and it’s important to stress that addiction is something consequential and needs to be addressed to better help the client, the family, and the community.

References

Cancio, R. (2021). Military cohorts, substance use, and male-perpetrated intimate partner

violence. Violence Against Women, 27(3/4), 399–424. https://doi-

org.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/10.1177/1077801219893475

Cozza, S. J., Whaley, G. L., Fisher, J. E., Zhou, J., Ortiz, C. D., McCarroll, J. E., Fullerton, C. S.,

& Ursano, R. J. (2018). Deployment status and child neglect types in the U.S. Army.

Child Maltreatment, 23(1), 255.https://doiorg.ezp.waldenlibrary.org/10.1177/10775595

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Kulak, J. A., Fillo, J., Homish, D. L., Kahn, L., & Homish, G. G. (2019). Substance use and

mental health among military spouses and partners. Military Behavioral Health, 7(3),

257–267. https://doi-org.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/10.1080/21635781.2019.1591314

Price, L. E., Noulas, P., Wen, I., & Spray, A. (2019). A portal to healing: treating military

families and veterans through telehealth. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 75(2), 271–281.

https://doi-org.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/10.1002/jclp.22720

Vincenzes, K. A., McMahon, B., Lange, J., & Forziat-Pytel, K. (2019). Systemic issues in the

opioid epidemic: supporting the individual, family, and community. International

Journal of Mental Health & Addiction, 17(5), 1214–1228. https://doi-

org.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/10.1007/s11469-018-0041-3