| Literature DB >> 19930575 |
Wendy Sword1, Susan Jack, Alison Niccols, Karen Milligan, Joanna Henderson, Lehana Thabane.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a need for services that effectively and comprehensively address the complex needs of women with substance use issues and their children. A growing body of literature supports the relevance of integrated treatment programs that offer a wide range of services in centralized settings. Quantitative studies suggest that these programs are associated with positive outcomes. A qualitative meta-synthesis was conducted to provide insight into the processes that contribute to recovery in integrated programs and women's perceptions of benefits for themselves and their children.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19930575 PMCID: PMC2789048 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7517-6-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Inclusion Criteria
| Study Component | Criteria |
|---|---|
| 1. Study design | • Must explore women's, children's, or clinicians' experiences (outcomes or processes) in an integrated treatment program for substance-using pregnant women or mothers using a qualitative research design that meets the criteria as defined by Creswell [ |
| 2. Treatment program participants (must meet all criteria) | • Women who are pregnant or parenting |
| • Participants had a substance use problem (drug or alcohol) confirmed at baseline enrolment into treatment program by either admission to a substance use treatment program or report of a formal diagnosis | |
| 3. Treatment program characteristics (must meet all criteria) | • Must include at least one substance-use treatment service addressing substance use specifically; can be a group or individual treatment service |
| • Must include at least one treatment service related to children 0-16 years, including children not yet born such as: | |
| Prenatal care for the mother | |
| Childcare or babysitting offered | |
| Therapeutic childcare | |
| Child resides with mother in residential treatment program | |
| Child developmental assessments conducted | |
| Primary/physical infant health care provided | |
| Child mental health services or therapy | |
| Parenting support or education group | |
| Individual parenting support | |
| • Treatment program must not include treatment of males | |
| • Treatment program must not include women who are not pregnant or parenting | |
| • Treatment program must not be exclusively a smoking cessation program | |
| 4. Reported findings | • Qualitative findings addressing processes or outcomes related to any of the following areas: |
| Maternal health and well-being | |
| Child health and well-being | |
| Parenting | |
Study Characteristics
| Author(s) | Setting/Program Elements | Objective | Research Method | Study Participants | Qualitative Data Source(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nardi [ | Midwestern city, USA | To explore the nature of parenting and addiction recovery for pregnant and parenting women in an addiction treatment program | Mixed methods combining grounded theory methodology with quantitative methods of descriptive and differential statistics | N = 17 | Single semi-structured interviews, participant observation, field notes, client records (medical records, infant birth records, therapy treatment notes, program progress notes) |
| Nardi [ | As above | To explore the nature of parent-infant interaction during the first year in a perinatal addiction treatment program | As above | As above | As above |
| Baldwin et al. [ | Western USA | To examine women's experiences in a community-based program for young mothers (and their children ages birth to 5 years) involved in substance abuse and their perceptions of risk and health promoting behaviours before and during the intervention program | Qualitative description using ethnographic interview techniques within a participatory action research process | N = 42 | Semi-structured interviews at each of the 16 program sessions |
| Howell & Chasnoff [ | Eastern USA | To identify factors in women's lives that facilitate or act as barriers to the treatment process and to describe successful program components that addressed the needs of the population | Qualitative description | Three types of participants: | Thirty-three focus groups were conducted across the five sites including: 5 groups of program administrators; 16 groups of providers; and 12 groups of women participating in the programs |
| Schretzman [ | New York City, USA | To identify factors associated with successful treatment outcomes and to identify factors that both support and challenge participants' post-treatment experiences | Mixed methods with a qualitative case study conducted concurrently with a descriptive quantitative study | N= 20 women who had completed the program and remained alcohol and drug free at the time of the study | Single in-depth, semi-structured interviews |
| Salmon et al. [ | San Jose, California, USA | To explore the perceptions of pregnant and parenting substance-abusing women in an outpatient drug rehabilitation program about provider and social support, and to identify program elements that supported maintaining their abstinence from substance use | Qualitative description | N = 20 | Two semi-structured questionnaires with open-ended questions and structured questions on demographics and drug history completed during a private interview |
| Kunkel [ | Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada | To understand mothers' lived experiences of participating in a residential treatment program with their children, and to study the impact of the involvement of children in their mothers' residential addiction treatment program on both the experience of treatment and on recovery | Phenomenology | N = 6 | In-depth, open-ended interviews during week 8 of the program and a follow-up interview 1 month following treatment discharge |
| Simpson [ | Windsor, Ontario, Canada | To explore women's life situations and perspectives of the impact of the parenting program on their parenting style and relationship with children | Mixed methods, predominantly qualitative description informed by case study and phenomenological approaches | N = 7 who completed the 17-week parenting program module; most continued to attend the program for support | Single semi-structured interviews 3 months after program completion |
| Sword et al. [ | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | To describe mothers' experiences of participating in the community-based treatment program and to understand their perceptions of how the program influenced changes in their lives and the lives of their children | Qualitative exploratory | N = 11 women ages 21 to 36 years who had completed at least 3 months of the program | Seven women new to the program completed an in-depth individual interview and seven women participated in a single focus group post program involvement |
| Motz et al. [ | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | To explore factors influencing women's progress through and satisfaction with the treatment program services | Program evaluation using mixed methods, including a qualitative descriptive component | N = 19 | Three separate focus groups: |
| de Guzman et al. [ | New York City, USA | To examine program participants' experiences in the program and to describe their perceptions of intervention processes that influenced behavioural changes related to substance use, parenting behaviours, coping, and social support networks | Qualitative exploratory | N = 25 selected from a larger intervention trial | Single in-depth semi-structured interviews after completion of the final quantitative follow-up (12 to 20 months after the last intervention session) |
| Polansky et al. [ | Philadelphia, USA | To explore mothers' experiences of participating in the attachment-based parenting group and their perceptions of how the group influenced interactions with their children and children's behaviour | Qualitative exploratory | N = 7 | Single semi-structured interviews 1 to 3 weeks following completion of the parenting group |
| Wong [ | New York City, USA | To explore mothers' perceptions of the supportive function of the treatment program and how it affected their parenting experiences and outcomes | Mixed methods, predominately qualitative exploratory with a descriptive quantitative component | N = 10 women 25 to 45 years of age who had completed at least 3 months of treatment | Three in-depth, semi-structured interviews, participatory observation, and field notes |
| Wong [ | As above | To explore how substance-abusing mothers perceived their parenting experiences within the social context of a residential treatment program | As above | As above | As above |
Summary of Sources for Process Themes and Outcomes
| Processes | Sources |
|---|---|
| Development of a sense of self | Baldwin et al. [ |
| Development of personal agency | Baldwin et al. [ |
| Giving and receiving of social support | Baldwin et al. [ |
| Engagement with program staff | de Guzman et al. [ |
| Self-disclosure | Baldwin et al. [ |
| Recognizing destructiveness patterns | Baldwin et al. [ |
| Goal setting | Baldwin et al. [ |
| Motivating presence of children | Kunkel [ |
| Maternal outcomes | de Guzman et al. [ |
| Child outcomes | Sword et al. [ |
| Parenting outcomes | de Guzman et al. [ |