Living with a loved one’s mental health issue: Recognizing the Lived Experiences of Military Spouses
Emma Senior, Amanda Clarke, Gemma Wilson-Menzfeld

TL;DR
This study explores the emotional and psychological experiences of military spouses living with a partner who has mental health issues, highlighting both challenges and personal growth.
Contribution
The study introduces a Relationship Trajectory model and emphasizes the emotional strain before diagnosis, offering new insights into military spouse experiences.
Findings
Military spouses often become primary caregivers due to inadequate healthcare systems.
Emotional and psychological strain is prolonged before formal mental health diagnosis.
Participants experienced both relationship decline and eventual reinvention.
Abstract
Limited evidence surrounds the lived experiences of military spouses whose partner has mental health issues. This lack of evidence may be due to factors such as global austerity, underfunding of armed forces, and inadequate healthcare systems. As a result, family members—especially spouses—often end up being the primary caregivers for their military partners with mental health issues. The study used a qualitative, biographical methodology, collecting data through life stories. Two face-to-face semi-structured interviews took place with nine military spouse recruited through military spouse networks and snowballing. Lieblich et al.’s (1998) framework provided analytical pluralism, which allowed for both narrative and thematic analysis. Stories are presented in the stages ‘in the beginning’, changing times’ and ‘this is me’. Thematic analysis identified six overarching categories; Living…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPosttraumatic Stress Disorder Research · Attachment and Relationship Dynamics · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness
