Substance abuse related issues can be treated effectively with a family-based treatment. (Gladding, 2015). According to Gladding (2015), some of the most effective approaches in treating substance-related disorders in families are structural-strategic, Bowen, behavioral, Adlerian and multifamily therapy. The behavior of substance abusers or dependents of substance might have difference interacting with others, whom they come in contact with (Gladding, 2015). Substance abuse effects the entire family. The parent who grown up in a substance abuse home might find it challenging to have a long-lasting and intimate relationship (Gladding, 2015). Whereas, the child who lives in in setting with a substance abuse are more likely to develop social and…
About fifty to eighty percent of child abuse cases involve substance abuse by the children’s parents. A neglected child tends to repeat the tragic moments that occurred in his/her childhood. Kids who suffer repeated trauma feel discarded, distanced from those around them, and scared. Abused children tend to become bitter human beings, with mental consequences that last long after physical wounds heal which can cause the effect to travel into future relationships. More than 75 percent of all domestic violence cases were caused by people under the influence of drugs. Realizing that addiction can be considered as a brain disease. Addiction can be described as compulsive, and some even consider it to be a uncontrollable drug craving. Going back to abused and neglected children addiction can become genetic, behavioral, environmental, and developmental. The usage of drugs is at first a choice (voluntary) but this can quickly die. The human brain is a remarkable complex of communications network that is programed to reward certain behaviors so that we will tend to crave bad habits, with prolonged abstinence from the usage of drugs the brain can in fact recover at least some of the former functioning. Enabling them the regain control of their lives. Some ways to prevent becoming an abuser of drugs is to identify risks and creating better prevention programs. Prevention is to understand the brain circuitry involved in the…
Background – Parents lifestyle and parenting skills– If a parent is a substance user ( drugs or alcohol ) then they may not be there for their children either physically as they may leave the child in the house on their own while they look for drugs or out doing crime to fund their drug habit but also emotionally as when they are at home they will be intoxicated and not talk or…
It is also clear, from other data that individuals who have substance abuse issues are more likely to be incarcerated than individuals who do not have similar substance abuse issues. Accordingly, when children have parents who are incarcerated, they are at greater risk for behaviors that lead to incarceration, if not incarceration itself (Sloan…
Having to deal with addicted parents is immensely challenging for teens. Aside from having to deal with school, friends, and other things, some teens also have to deal with addicted parents. It is an obstacle for them to balance their school and family lives because instead of receiving support from their parents, they actually have to depend on themselves. It is all up to them to tend to their own needs on what is supposed to be their parents duties and responsibilities. This make them to not trust their own parents and even other people. Self-isolation is also a problem of teens who come from dysfunctional families, because they do not rely and trust others. In other cases, some teens follow the footprints of their parents and engage in illegal…
Rus-Makovec, M., Sernec, K., Rus, V. S., Cebasek-Travnik, Z., Tomori, M., Ziherl, S. (2010). Adolescent substance dependency in relation to parental substance abuse. Zdrav Var; 49:1-10.…
In this article Eiden et al (2007) studied two separate groups of children from the “average” population of Erie County in New York State. One group was of families consisting of parents who had no or few current alcohol problems, while the other group contained families where one parent suffered from an alcohol problem. They found a direct connection between a higher amount of negative behavior developing in children with a parent who had alcoholic tendencies, specifically an alcoholic father. This research was important because it was one of the first to investigate the correlation between alcoholic parents and children’s behavioral development from infancy, where most studies focused on early adolescence and follow the development of an…
The examples provided suggest that neglectful parenting can have both positive and negative consequences on adolescent substance abuse, similarly to parental over-involvement or authoritarian parenting styles. As specified, permissive or neglectful parenting tends to provide more impactful tendencies on the adolescent when it comes to substance use and abuse. The research presented proposes that those impactful tendencies within this particular parenting technique is consequently one of the poorest parenting styles to adopt on both the positive and negative aspects in terms of adolescent substance…
With a reasonable amount of control over their child’s development, a parent in this context will expect fair maturity levels, obedience and provide guidelines for the child to mature properly. There is open communication between the child and the parent, which allows the child to trust their parent. The parent is consciously open to opinions of the child but also makes sure the child takes into consideration the parents’ perspective as well. An authoritative parent will discipline the child to an extent, and will nurture, accept, love the child, and support the child to be autonomous and independent, despite failure. A study was conducted that looked at family patterns as determinants of adolescent competence, and of types of adolescent substance users. The researchers found that authoritative parents who are highly demanding and highly responsive were remarkably successful in protecting their adolescents from problem drug use, and in generating competence.…
First, sufferers may look unkempt or just inappropriate, as they are sometimes neglected by the drug or alcohol abusing parent. Monday is often the “sloppy day.” Children may come to school late as they are usually taking care of themselves and often times even others in the home. Preparing breakfast, making sure younger siblings get off to school and cleaning up after the substance abusing parent. Second, these children may talk about witnessing violent or abusive situations at home. In the textbook “Substance Abuse” fourth edition it states that “Families often invoke rules such as “Don’t talk, don’t trust, and don’t feel.” Substance abusing parents believe that by invoking this motto it prevents people outside the family from knowing what is going on inside the family. Third, Academic performance may suffer because these children can’t help but worry about their home life and their substance abusing parent. On the COAF web site the interesting point was noted that towards the end of the school day often times the children begin to worry about going back home. Fourth, Schools and teachers have reported the children effected by substance abusing parents frequently may seem depressed or withdrawn often times exhibiting behavioral problems. Some examples of these behaviors might be complaining of stomachaches, headaches or other physical ailments, with no explainable…
One main problem that drug abuse can cause is children growing up in one-parent homes because of a parent incarcenration for drug-related charges. One of the most common crimes for parents to serve time in a federal prison is drug-related offenses and one-third of the parents incarcerated in state prisons stated that he or she was under the influence of some type of drug when he or she committed the crime convicted of (BJS, 2000). The percentage of drug-addicted parents reveals that many children grow up in one-parent households, live with other family members, or in foster care. Thirty-three percent of mothers and 19% of fathers incarcerated committed his or her crime to obtain money to buy drugs. Over 50% of both mothers and fathers reported that he or she has used drugs in the month before committing his or her crime. Parents have a big influence on his or her children lives. Drug abuse can run in the family. Some children believe if his or her parent used drugs, he or she will use drugs. In most households, if both of the parents are addicted to drugs, the chances of the child using drugs will…
Drug abuse is a complex problem thought to result from a combination of hereditary, psychological, and environmental factors. It affects people from the neonatal stage to old age. Infants of abusers may suffer from neglect or the effects of parental drug use. As they grow into childhood, they may demonstrate antisocial behavior, and signs of malnutrition, poor self-esteem, depression, or attention deficit disorder. This may lead an adolescent to use drugs, have unwanted pregnancies, and drop out of school. Identification of drug abuse is a difficult first step on the road to recovery because of the methods many abuses use to hide their addiction, the inability of family members to recognize or accept the…
The juvenile justice system and parents across America struggle on a day-to-day basis with their children and substance abuse. It is stated that four out of every five children arrested within the system are under the influence of a substance (alcohol or drugs) when committing the crimes that forced them to be detained and arrested (Alcoholism.about.com, 2010). It is reported within the textbook that seventy-three percent of high school seniors had used alcohol within the past year, which makes the possibility of teenagers entering the juvenile justice system even higher (Siegel & Welsh, 2009). It is also believed that we as a society, does not provide the adequate support to those youth that are using controlled substances; which could in turn result in a more positive outcome, versus a decline in their behavior from initial arrest (Alcholism.about.com, 2010). This is a very true statement because in 2009, the SAMSHA reported that 374,000 citizens were treated for substance abuse between the ages of eighteen to twenty-four; that does not include the amount of individuals who did not seek help and those that were even younger. It also does not tell the story about how many of those individuals started using controlled substances at an earlier age as a juvenile (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, n.d.). According to Joseph Califano, Jr., we are writing of the younger Americans by releasing them back into society without attending to their substance abuse needs (Alcholism.about.com, 2010).…
Associations between drug and alcohol use and juvenile criminal activities have been a well-known fact, that’s often thought of as a correlation. “The estimated prevalence of substance abuse disorder and juvenile offending approaches 67% across studies in justice settings” (Liddle, 2014). Whether the alcohol and other drug (AOD) use led them to the criminal activity or AOD will be an issue for the juvenile offender once they are out of the justice system. Questions form at this transition stage for the adolescent on whether or not that offender will return to their AOD use, as well as recidivate back into the juvenile justice system. Recidivism meaning a relapse into their previous behavior, especially criminal behavior.…
Drug abuse can cause an addict to become violent and physically or emotionally abuse the child or sexually abuse them and cause damage that will stay with the child for the rest of their lives (Nichols, 2015). Another negative effect that drug addiction can cause is serious emotional damage for the child (Nichols, 2015). The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) reports that 35.6 million children in the United States under the age of eighteen lives in a home where a parent drinks or uses illicit drugs (CASA, 2009). Studies show that nearly eighty percent of all child abuse and neglect cases are a result of the parent being involved with drugs or alcohol (CASA, 2009). Many children of addicts can suffer from long-term emotional or psychological damage that causes serious effects on their mental health (Nichols, 2015). These children tend to be diagnosed with behavioral problems, such as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and depression (CASA, 2009). Children to lose respect for the parent who is abusing substances as they are no longer able to properly take care of the child (Nichols, 2015). The home may be lacking in any kind of structure and rules, causing the child to turn to abusing substances in order to escape from the pain of their reality (Nichols, 2015). Children of substance abusers have four times greater risk of developing an alcohol or drug problems than children of non-users (CASA, 2009). Substance abuse not only has a negative effect on the individual family member, but it can affect the family as a…