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Dive into the research topics where Jeffery D. Snarr is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffery D. Snarr.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2011

Risk for suicidal ideation in the U.S. Air Force: An ecological perspective

Jennifer Langhinrichsen-Rohling; Jeffery D. Snarr; Amy M. Smith Slep; Richard E. Heyman; Heather M. Foran

OBJECTIVE Suicidal members of the U.S. military often fail to disclose their suicidal urges and behaviors. Military suicide prevention efforts may therefore be enhanced if they also target less stigmatized psychosocial factors that may decrease risk of suicidality. In keeping with Bronfenbrenners (1977, 1994) model, this study simultaneously examined 4 ecological levels (i.e., individual, family, workplace, and community) of factors variously associated with increased or decreased risk for suicidal ideation. METHOD Active-duty U.S. Air Force members (N = 52,780; 79.3% male; 79.2% non-Hispanic White; mean age = 31.78 years, SD = 7.38) completed the 2006 Community Assessment survey (a biennial, anonymous survey conducted at 82 U.S. Air Force bases worldwide), including the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions (2008) 5-item measure of past-year suicidality along with scales assessing an array of potential predictors. RESULTS The 1-year rate of suicidal ideation, defined as (a) more than rarely thinking about suicide or (b) ever seriously considering suicide, was approximately 4%. In multivariate models, for men and women, individual- (depressive symptoms and alcohol problems), family- (relationship satisfaction and intimate partner victimization), workplace- (hours worked), and community-level (social support) variables were retained in the final model. However, some sex differences in retained predictors were noted (e.g., men: dissatisfaction with the U.S. Air Force way of life; women: workplace relationship satisfaction and financial stressors). CONCLUSIONS Addressing depressive symptoms and alcohol use, facilitating healthy relationship functioning, and increasing job satisfaction and social support may aid military suicide prevention efforts. These findings illustrate the importance of attending to multiple levels of potential influence when designing integrated suicide prevention and intervention programs.


Psychological Assessment | 2009

Validation of a New Self-Report Measure of Parental Attributions.

Jeffery D. Snarr; Amy M. Smith Slep; Vincent P. Grande

Attributional theory and empirical evidence suggest that a tendency to make stable, global self-causal attributions for undesirable events is associated with negative outcomes. However, existing self-report measures of parental attributions do not account for the possibility that dysfunctional parent-causal attributions for child misbehavior might be important predictors of poor family functioning. To address these concerns, the authors developed and tested a new measure of both parent-causal and child-responsible attributions for child misbehavior in a sample of 453 community couples. Structural validity, convergent validity, discriminant validity, internal consistency, and temporal stability of the new measure were examined. As expected, confirmatory factor analysis resulted in 2 factors, Child-Responsible (9 items) and Parent-Causal (7 items); the final model was cross-validated in a holdout sample. The final scale demonstrated adequate internal consistency (alphas = .81-.90), test-retest reliability (rs = .55-.76), and convergent and discriminant validity. Dysfunctional parent-causal and child-responsible attributions significantly predicted parental emotional problems, ineffective discipline, parent-child physical aggression, and low parenting satisfaction. Associations with parent-child aggression and parenting satisfaction were generally larger than with partner aggression and relationship satisfaction.


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2012

Hazardous Alcohol Use and Intimate Partner Violence in the Military: Understanding Protective Factors

Heather M. Foran; Richard E. Heyman; Amy M. Smith Slep; Jeffery D. Snarr

Hazardous alcohol use is a well-established risk factor for mens intimate partner violence (IPV), with dozens of studies demonstrating the association. The current study extends understanding of the hazardous alcohol use-IPV link by examining what factors moderate this association in a more systematic and broader way that has been done in past studies. Individual, family, workplace, community, and developmental factors were tested as moderators of the hazardous alcohol use and IPV link in a large, representative sample of active duty service members (the 2006 Community Assessment), and the results were tested for replicability in a hold-out sample. Two family variables (relationship satisfaction and parent-child satisfaction), 1 community variable (community safety), and 3 developmental variables (years in the military, marital length, and family income/pay grade) cross-validated as significant moderators of the association between mens hazardous alcohol use and IPV. Across the significant moderators, the association between hazardous alcohol use and mens IPV was weakened by maturation/development, improved community safety, and better relationship functioning. No individual or workplace variables were significant moderators for men, and there were no significant moderators found for women. The results support the importance of a developmental and relational perspective to understanding the hazardous alcohol use-IPV link, rather than solely an individual coping perspective.


Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior | 2010

Recent Suicidal Ideation and Suicide Attempts in a Large–Scale Survey of the U.S. Air Force: Prevalences and Demographic Risk Factors

Jeffery D. Snarr; Richard E. Heyman; Amy M. Smith Slep

One-year prevalences of self-reported noteworthy suicidal ideation and nonfatal suicide attempts were assessed in a large sample of U.S. Air Force active duty members (N = 52,780). Participants completed the 2006 Community Assessment, which was conducted online. Over 3% of male and 5.5% of female participants reported having experienced noteworthy suicidal ideation during the previous year, and 8.7% of those with ideation reported a recent suicide attempt. Demographic factors predicting significantly increased risk for suicidal ideation included female gender, low rank, and non-Christian religious affiliation; unmarried men were also at increased risk. Groups that were at increased risk for nonfatal suicide attempts included low-ranking men and Hispanic women. Implications for prevention efforts are discussed.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2011

Preventive Impacts of Reliable Family Maltreatment Criteria

Jeffery D. Snarr; Richard E. Heyman; Amy M. Smith Slep; Jill Malik

OBJECTIVE The U.S. Air Force recently implemented system-wide changes that both (a) clarified the criteria used to determine when family maltreatment has occurred and (b) made the process by which these decisions are made more consistent. The current study examined the effects of these changes on family maltreatment recidivism. METHOD Official records were obtained from the Air Force Family Advocacy Program. All cases decided during the last year of the old system and the first year of the new system at each base (total N = 14,298) were examined. For each incident, it was determined (a) whether the incident met criteria and (b) whether the same offender committed family maltreatment again within 1 year of the initial incident. RESULTS Overall substantiation rates were significantly lower (p = .003) under the new system (47%) than the old (56%). After the change, significant interaction effects were obtained for both alleged (b = -.51, p = .004) and substantiated (b = -.55, p = .015) reoffense, in that 1-year reoffense rates decreased significantly among initially substantiated cases but remained unchanged among initially unsubstantiated cases. Indeed, rates of substantiated reoffense by substantiated offenders were cut in half (from 14% to 7%). CONCLUSIONS Reductions in overall substantiation rates were most likely due to the use of more stringent criteria. The results of the recidivism analyses suggest that clear criteria and consistent decision processes can have secondary preventive effects on family maltreatment in their own right, possibly due to increases in informal community sanctions.


Aggressive Behavior | 2014

Identifying unique and shared risk factors for physical intimate partner violence and clinically-significant physical intimate partner violence: Risk Factors for Intimate Partner Violence

Amy M. Smith Slep; Heather M. Foran; Richard E. Heyman; Jeffery D. Snarr

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a significant public health concern. To date, risk factor research has not differentiated physical violence that leads to injury and/or fear (i.e., clinically significant IPV; CS-IPV) from general physical IPV. Isolating risk relations is necessary to best inform prevention and treatment efforts. The current study used an ecological framework and evaluated relations of likely risk factors within individual, family, workplace, and community levels with both CS-IPV and general IPV to determine whether they were related to one type of IPV, both, or neither for both men and women. Probable risk and promotive factors from multiple ecological levels of influence were selected from the literature and assessed, along with CS-IPV and general IPV, via an anonymous, web-based survey. The sample comprised US Air Force (AF) active duty members and civilian spouses (total N = 36,861 men; 24,331 women) from 82 sites worldwide. Relationship satisfaction, age, and alcohol problems were identified as unique risk factors (in the context of the 23 other risk factors examined) across IPV and CS-IPV for men and women. Other unique risk factors were identified that differed in prediction of IPV and CS-IPV. The results suggest a variety of both established and novel potential foci for indirectly targeting partner aggression and clinically-significant IPV by improving peoples risk profiles at the individual, family, workplace, and community levels. Aggr. Behav. 41:227-241, 2015.


Aggressive Behavior | 2014

Identifying unique and shared risk factors for physical intimate partner violence and clinically-significant physical intimate partner violence.

Amy M. Smith Slep; Heather M. Foran; Richard E. Heyman; Jeffery D. Snarr

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a significant public health concern. To date, risk factor research has not differentiated physical violence that leads to injury and/or fear (i.e., clinically significant IPV; CS-IPV) from general physical IPV. Isolating risk relations is necessary to best inform prevention and treatment efforts. The current study used an ecological framework and evaluated relations of likely risk factors within individual, family, workplace, and community levels with both CS-IPV and general IPV to determine whether they were related to one type of IPV, both, or neither for both men and women. Probable risk and promotive factors from multiple ecological levels of influence were selected from the literature and assessed, along with CS-IPV and general IPV, via an anonymous, web-based survey. The sample comprised US Air Force (AF) active duty members and civilian spouses (total N = 36,861 men; 24,331 women) from 82 sites worldwide. Relationship satisfaction, age, and alcohol problems were identified as unique risk factors (in the context of the 23 other risk factors examined) across IPV and CS-IPV for men and women. Other unique risk factors were identified that differed in prediction of IPV and CS-IPV. The results suggest a variety of both established and novel potential foci for indirectly targeting partner aggression and clinically-significant IPV by improving peoples risk profiles at the individual, family, workplace, and community levels. Aggr. Behav. 9999:XX-XX, 2014.


Journal of Community Health | 2010

Unique Risk and Protective Factors for Partner Aggression in a Large Scale Air Force Survey

Amy M. Smith Slep; Heather M. Foran; Richard E. Heyman; Jeffery D. Snarr


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2011

Child emotional aggression and abuse: definitions and prevalence.

Amy M. Smith Slep; Richard E. Heyman; Jeffery D. Snarr


Journal of Marriage and Family | 2011

Risk Factors for Clinically Significant Intimate Partner Violence Among Active‐Duty Members

Amy M. Smith Slep; Heather M. Foran; Richard E. Heyman; Jeffery D. Snarr

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Heather M. Foran

Braunschweig University of Technology

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Jill Malik

State University of New York System

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