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NASW Practice Snapshot:
Parental Substance Abuse and Child Welfare
Office of Social Work Specialty Practice
As reported in the October 2003 NASW Child Welfare Practice Update,
one of the most significant problems facing the child welfare system
is parental substance abuse. It is estimated that 80 percent of children
in out-of-home placements are there due to parental substance abuse
problems (DHHS, 2000).
Focusing on alcohol abuse, it has reported that up to 66 percent
of children raised by alcoholic parents were physically abused or
witnessed family violence, and 26 percent of the children had been
sexually abused (Hayes & Emshoff, 1993). Physical or sexual abuse
was reported to occur regularly in one-third of alcoholic homes.
Given the scope of this issue, social workers serving this population
may look to programs that have shown promise in helping these families.
One such program is the Miami , Florida Dependency Drug Court, which
has instituted a comprehensive approach to providing services to
substance abusing parents involved in child protective services,
recognizing that these families often have different needs from others
in the child welfare system.
The interdisciplinary plan to help the whole family includes a parenting
program, intensive case management and monitoring, communication
across systems facilitated by a drug court caseworker, a high level
of involvement on the part of the judge, and continual assessment.
The Miami program, seen as a promising evidence-based parenting
program working with substance abusing parents, has identified the
following essential components for developing an effective parenting
program for substance abusing families:
- Choice of Partner: Select a community agency with experience
in serving families affected by substance abuse to provide parenting
training.
- Parenting Curriculum: Base curriculum on the needs of
the targeted population.
- Staff: Train staff in diversity, substance
abuse, mental health issues, and behavioral issues. In addition,
provide child care for children with behavioral or emotional
problems.
- Group Size : Restrict groups to eight to ten families,
culturally diverse in makeup, to allow for exposure to different
cultural norms for parenting and more openness to new parenting
practices.
Additional information is available through the National Council
of Juvenile and Family Court Judges at www.ncjfcj.org/publications/
Resources
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- Hayes, H. R. & Emshoff, J. G. (1993). Substance abuse and family
violence. In R. L.Hampton, T. P. Gullotta, G. R. Adams, E. H. Potter
III & R. P. Weissberg (Eds.), Family violence: Prevention
and treatment, Issues in children's and families' Lives ( Vol.1),.
Newbury Park , CA : Sage Publications.
- National Association of Social Workers. (2003). Child welfare practice
update: ASFA and substance abuse: Understanding the issues impacting
two systems of care. Washington , DC : NASW.
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- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2000). Rethinking
child welfare under the adoption and safe families act of 1997:
A resource guide [Online]. Available at: http://www.cwresource.org/Online%20publications/ASFA%20Resource%20Guide.pdf
NASW, March 2005
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