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| Parents Under Pressure: Helping High-Risk Families |
| Written by Sharon Dawe, PhD and Paul Harnett, PhD | ||||||||
| Saturday, 12 July 2008 | ||||||||
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Children raised in families with parental substance abuse have a range of adverse outcomes. In their early years these children often show high rates of emotional, behavioral and social problems in the home and at school. By middle school, numeracy and literacy problems emerge. The behavioral problems and interpersonal difficulties with peers and teachers makes school an adverse experience leading to truancy during adolescence. This, in turn, can lead to delinquency, particularly in the absence of parental monitoring. Parental substance misuse contributes in part to this trajectory of poor outcomes for children. However, parental substance misuse typically co- occurs with other significant problems, including: mental health issues such as anxiety and depression; social isolation; relationship difficulties, and domestic violence and poverty, all of which put strain on the family system.
For many parents who misuse substances their current problems can be traced to adverse childhood experiences, including their own chaotic family of origin. With this adversity in early life they are often left psychologically damaged and poorly prepared to provide a safe, stable and nurturing family environment for their own children. The need to engage in criminal activities when the substance of abuse is an illicit drug makes change for these families very difficult (see Dawe et al., 2007 for an extensive review of this literature). Sharon Dawe, PhD is a clinical psychologist and researcher with a longstanding interest in treatment evaluation in substance misuse. She is particularly interested in the role of impulsivity in the development of substance misuse problems and the treatment implications thereof.
Paul Harnett, PhD is a clinical psychologist and researcher in child and adolescent psychology. He has worked clinically for many years in child protection and his most recent interests include the application of mindfulness and related concepts to clinical psychology.
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