Evaluation of Navy Counseling and Advocacy Programs: Relating Programs to Readiness and Retention

Evaluation of Navy Counseling and Advocacy Programs: Relating Programs to Readiness and Retention
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 86
Release: 2003
Genre:
ISBN:

Quality of life (QOL) programs represent a significant investment by the military. Policy-makers need data that will enable them to determine whether QOL programs contribute to positive perceptions of Navy life and impact military outcomes. In the initial phase of this project (see Schwerin, Michael, Glaser, & Uriell, 2001, a QOL assessment system and methodology were developed that could be applied to all Navy QOL programs. The present report evaluates the survey data collected on two QOL programs: New Parent Support Program (NPSP) and the Sexual Assault Victim Intervention (SAVI) program. Surveys were administered to NPSP and SAVI program users at sites Navy-wide. Program quality generally exceeded patrons' expectations and patrons believed the programs met the program specific objectives, the overarching Reasons for Being (RFB) program goals, and Navy organizational objectives. In addition, QOL, Readiness, and the program's contribution to the Service members' Intention to Remain in the military were predicted by various RFB objectives and program quality; however, these variables had less impact on overall Career Intentions.

An Evaluation of the Navy Family Advocacy Program at Naval Regional Medical Center, Camp Pendleton, California

An Evaluation of the Navy Family Advocacy Program at Naval Regional Medical Center, Camp Pendleton, California
Author: Anne J. Rawley
Publisher:
Total Pages: 176
Release: 1982
Genre:
ISBN:

This study examines the development, implementation, and results of a Family Advocacy Program to determine if the program meets standards imposed by the Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (BUMED). Programs for identification, intervention, treatment, and prevention of child abuse, spouse abuse, and sexual assault were studied. The author concludes that the Family Advocacy Program studied fails to meet the standards imposed by BUMED, and argues that this indicates the standards are unrealistic given the lack of additional resources allocated to the facility for the program. The author recommends that control and coordination of the Family Advocacy Program at the local level to be developed to the medical command, but rather to the larger military community via the chain of command. Keywords: Theses; Health care; Child/Spouse abuse; Family advocacy; Public health; Medical services.

The Oxford Handbook of Military Psychology

The Oxford Handbook of Military Psychology
Author: Janice H. Laurence
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 432
Release: 2012-02-24
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0199938040

The critical link between psychology and the military is imprtant to recruiting, training, socializing, assigning, employing, deploying, motivating, rewarding, maintaining, managing, integrating, retaining, transitioning, supporting, counseling, and healing military members. These areas are hardly distinct, and the chapters in The Oxford Handbook of Military Psychology have contents that cross these boundaries. Collectively, the topics covered in this volume describe the myriad ways in which modern psychology influences warfare and vice versa. The extensive topics included come from within the areas of clinical, industrial/organizational, experimental, engineering, and social psychology. The contributors are top international experts in military psychology -- some uniformed soldiers, others academics and clinicians, and others civilian employees of the military or other government agencies. They address important areas in which the science and practice of psychology supports military personnel in their varied and complex missions. Among the topics addressed here are suitability for service, leadership, decision making, training, terrorism, socio-cultural competencies, diversity and cohesion, morale, quality-of-life, ethical challenges, and mental health and fitness. The focus is the ways in which psychology promotes the decisive human dimension of military effectiveness. Collectively, the 25 topical chapters of this handbook provide an overview of modern military psychology and its tremendous influence on the military and society as a whole.

Department of the Navy Family Advocacy Program: Service Need and Service Response. Phase II Report: Assessment

Department of the Navy Family Advocacy Program: Service Need and Service Response. Phase II Report: Assessment
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 263
Release: 1983
Genre:
ISBN:

This report assesses the operation of the Navy Family Advocacy Program at the command level. Based on site visits to 13 Navy and Marine Corps bases worldwide, the report: describes the structure and operational context of the programs in the late winter of 1983; assesses the relationship between service need and service response; identifies major program strengths, program concerns, and program dilemmas; and discusses the interactions between medical and nonmedical personnel, both military and civilian, in the treatment and prevention of child abuse, spouse abuse, and sexual assault or rape. The report also identifies program needs and recommendations for program improvement. Findings are based on approximately 300 individual and group personal interviews with Department of the Navy and civilian personnel, case statistics, program documents, and structured observations of Family Advocacy Committee meetings. The findings indicate a high degree of variation in program structure and operation across sites. Program strengths include interagency cooperation availability of civilian resources, command support, and ongoing training of Family Advocacy participants. Areas of concern include: lack of program clarity, insufficient staff resources, role ambiguity between medical and line personnel, focus on child maltreatment and confusion about reporting procedures. Differences in base and community resources and the perceived scope of abuse and neglect often are intervening variables in program development. (Author).

Navy Quality of Life (QOL) Program Contributions to Readiness and Retention. Volume 1. Design and Methodology

Navy Quality of Life (QOL) Program Contributions to Readiness and Retention. Volume 1. Design and Methodology
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2002
Genre:
ISBN:

Quality of Life (QOL) decision-makers need complete and accurate information that will help them determine if funded QOL programs are actually contributing to positive perceptions of Navy life, and which of them have the greatest impact. The objective of this project was to design and implement a QOL assessment system and methodology that could be applied to the entire spectrum of QOL programs in the Navy. Such a system required measures that were specific enough to capture the variability of the various programs, but had sufficient consistency across programs to facilitate comparisons. Additionally, the QOL Program Contributions project captured program-specific data that was expected to help link Navy QOL programs with highly desirable military outcomes (i.e., impact on personal readiness and retention intent). The conceptual considerations involved in this project centered on creating a common metric that could be used to evaluate these seemingly dissimilar QOL programs. In addition to the program evaluation measures, items designed to measure the impact of QOL programs on highly desirable military outcomes (i.e., personal readiness and retention intent) were developed and evaluated. An additional consideration was whether the program rating could be directly related to the outcome measure or whether the program's impact on QOL served as a mediator variable as previous research has indicated when used in domain research.