| Literature DB >> 28609440 |
Olga Wlodarczyk1, Mirjam Schwarze2, Hans-Jürgen Rumpf2, Franka Metzner1, Silke Pawils1.
Abstract
Children of parents with drug and alcohol use disorders often grow up under severe stress and are at greater risk of developing psychological and social problems. However, a substantial proportion of affected children adapt to their distressing life conditions and show positive development in terms of their mental health. These children are described as resilient. One difference between resilient and maladapted children is the presence of protective factors. The aim of this systematic review is to provide an overview of the current state of the research concerning protective mental health factors in children of parents with alcohol or drug use disorders (COPAD). For that purpose, the PsychInfo, PubMed, CINAHL and ISI Web of Science databases were searched through January 2017. All the identified publications were screened using previously developed inclusion criteria. The search yielded 3,402 articles. Eleven of these publications (2003-2013) met the criteria for inclusion in the present review. Information on the studies was extracted using an extraction form. A narrative analysis was performed, and the methodological quality was examined using a checklist based on the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. The research identified familial, parental, child-related and biological factors that influenced mental health outcomes in affected children (N = 1,376, age range = 1-20 years). Overall, protective mental health factors are understudied in this target group. Most of the included studies were conducted in the United States and employed a cross-sectional design. A comparison of the included cross-sectional and longitudinal studies indicated consistent results related to a secure parent-child attachment. Based on the current state of the research, no causal conclusions with regard to the effectiveness of protective factors can be drawn. To develop effective prevention programs, further longitudinal studies and studies assessing the interactions between risk and protective factors are needed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28609440 PMCID: PMC5469455 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Inclusion criteria (IC).
| Preselection | ||
| IC 0 | (1) The study focuses on children of parents with addiction and (2) the children, not the parents, are central. | |
| Outcome: Association between at least one protective factor and the child’s mental health | ||
| IC 1 | Protective factor: at least one factor is examined that protects or strengthens … | |
| IC 2 | … the child’s mental health (mental and social functioning) | |
| Population: children of families in which at least one parent has an alcohol or drug use disorder (NOT: especially strained samples who experienced, for example, war, flight, physical impairment/disease, mental disability, child abuse, drug use during pregnancy) | ||
| IC 3 | Children: all children and adolescents with a mean age of ≤ 21 years who are in contact with… | |
| IC 4 | Parents: at least one parent who currently or previously had substance-related abuse or dependence involving legal and/or illicit drugs (NOT: tobacco addiction/behavioral addictions, e.g., pathological gambling) | |
| IC 5 | The study population of the control group (case-control studies) or the initial population (cohort studies) is made up of children with lower levels of mental health and… | |
| IC 6 | Children with lower levels of the examined protective factor. | |
| Publication | ||
| IC 7 | The study is original, empirical research that was published in a peer-reviewed journal (NOT: a dissertation, congress contribution) | |
| Study design | ||
| IC 8 | The design of the study is one of the following: | |
| (retrospective or prospective) cohort study OR | ||
| case-control study OR | ||
| cross-sectional study | ||
| NOT: intervention study | ||
| Diagnostics | ||
| IC 9 | Parents: formal diagnostic evaluation for a substance abuse disorder or addiction was performed in accordance with the DSM-III, DSM-IV, DSM-IV-TR, ICD-9, ICD-10, RDC OR via an instrument that allows for a valid and reliable diagnosis OR via the application of a urine test OR based on the long-term use of a substance with high addictiveness (e.g., heroin, methamphetamine) OR the sample was recruited from larger longitudinal or interventional studies evaluating the effectiveness of addiction treatments (NOT: parental diagnosis based only on the children’s perspective) | |
| IC 10 | Children: the assessment of the child’s mental health was performed via a standardized instrument that allows for a valid and reliable assessment | |
Assessment of the methodological quality of the included studies.
| External validity | YES | NO | UNCLEAR | NOT APPLICABLE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Are the study participants representative of the population under examination? | (+) | (-) | (0) | (/) |
| Measurement bias | |||||
| Were valid and reliable measurement used to assess: | |||||
| 2. | …the protective factors? | (+) | (-) | (0) | (/) |
| 3. | …parental drug abuse disorder or addiction? | (+) | (-) | (0) | (/) |
| Attrition bias (cohort studies) | |||||
| 4. | Was the dropout rate in both groups acceptable (≤ 20%)? | (+) | (-) | (0) | (/) |
| Selection bias (case-control studies) | |||||
| 5. | Were the participants in the groups comparable with respect to possible confounders? | (+) | (-) | (0) | (/) |
Fig 1Flow of information through the different phases of the systematic review.
Overview of the studies that were included in the systematic review.
| First author (year) | Recruitment | Study design | Parents N (% female)/ Age (SD) | Children N (% female)/ Age (SD) | Diagnostic instrument for parental diagnoses | Diagnostic instrument to assess children’s mental health outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brook (2003) | Father-child dyads; outpatient substance abuse/AIDS treatment programs & general community | Cross-sectional study | 204 (0)/42 (5.8) | 204 (52)/16 (2.7) | Injected drug use, drug and alcohol abuse; Structured interview consisting of widely used scales | Alcohol use; Structured interview consisting of widely used and valid scales (respondent: child) |
| Conners-Burrow (2013) | Mother-child dyads; intake assessment, substance abuse treatment program | Cross-sectional study | 79 (100)/NOS | 79 (42)/4.0 (1.3) | Substance abuse (illicit drugs, alcohol); Addiction Severity Index [ | Emotional and behavioral problems; Devereux Early Childhood Assessment [ |
| Edwards (2006) | Father-child dyads; ongoing longitudinal study | Cohort study (2 years) | 91 (0)/33.0 (5.9) | 117 (52)/ (T1) 12 months, (T2) 24 month, (T3) 36 month | Alcohol abuse/ dependence; Self-report instrument based on the UM-CIDI [ | Externalizing, internalizing, behavior problems; Child Behavior Checklist [ |
| El-Sheikh (2003) | Families; advertisements, community sample | Cross-sectional study | NOS | 75 (55)/9.4 (2.1), Controls: 141 (46)/9.5 (1.9) | Problematic alcohol consumption; Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test [ | Externalizing, internalizing, social problems; Cognitive, academic functioning; Personality Inventory for Children [ |
| Heitzeg (2008) | Families; ongoing prospective community study | Case-control study | NOS | 11 (36)/17.5 (1.3), Controls: 11 (55)/18.4 (1.0) | Alcohol use disorders; DSM-IV | Externalizing behavioral problems; Alcohol use disorder risk; Youth Self-Report [ |
| King (2004) | Families; court records, telephone screening, medical insurance questionnaire, ongoing longitudinal study | Cohort study (approx. 8 years) | NOS | 365 (47)/ T1: 12.7 (1.45), T3: 15 (NOS), T4: 20.3 (NOS) | Alcohol abuse or dependence; Diagnostic Interview Schedule Version III [ | Drug abuse or dependence other than alcohol or tobacco; Diagnostic Inventory for Children [ |
| McCauley Ohannessian (2010) | Father-child dyads; ongoing longitudinal study | Cohort study (10 years) | 240 (0)/NOS | 240 (60)/16.7 (1.36) | Alcohol dependence; Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism [ | Alcohol abuse; Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test [ |
| Peleg-Oren (2008) | Father-child dyads; outpatient rehabilitation centers | Cross-sectional study | 72 (0), Age range: 21–40 (71), 41+ (29) | 72 (47)/ Age range: 8–9 (35%), 10–11 (65%) | Substance use and dependence; DSM-IV | Psychological distress: fears, anxiety, sadness, loneliness, depression; Emotional Distress Scale (developed by Peleg-Oren & Rahav); Adjustment: psychological, social and everyday home functioning; Adjustment of the Child in the Family Scale [ |
| Pilowsky (2004) | Families; AIDS clinic, support groups for HIV-positive individuals | Cross-sectional study | 25 (68)/37 (6.9), Controls: 66 (62)/37.5 (5.9) | NOS (69)/8.2 (1.6), Controls: NOS (47)/8.6 (1.8) | Injected drug users; Drug users with a history of injection | Child Behavior Checklist [ |
| Sheridan (2011) | Families; families involved with Children and Family Services | Cross-sectional study | NOS | 41 (44)/ 10 (NOS) | Methamphetamine addiction; NOS | Anxiety, depression, anger, posttraumatic stress, dissociation; Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children Alternate Version [ |
| Yau (2012) | Families; ongoing prospective community study | Cohort study | NOS | 20 (40)/20.2 (1.2) | Alcohol use disorder; DSM-IV (based on the father’s diagnosis) | Alcohol and substance use; Drinking and Drug History Form [ |
Note. NOS = not otherwise specified; approx. = approximately
Methodological quality of the included studies.
| First author (year) | External validity: representative sample | Measurement bias: valid & reliable measurement of | Case-control studies—selection bias: comparable study groups | Cohort studies–attrition bias: | Quality assessment | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| protective factors | child’s mental health outcome | Similar dropout rate in both groups | No systematic differences between completers & non-completers | High–medium—low | |||
| Brook (2003) | (0) | (+) | (+) | (/) | (/) | (/) | High |
| Conners-Burrow (2012) | (0) | (+) | (0) | (/) | (0) | (0) | Medium |
| Edwards (2006) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (/) | (+) | (+) | High |
| El-Sheikh (2003) | (0) | (+) | (+) | (/) | (0) | (0) | High |
| Heitzeg (2008) | (0) | (+) | (0) | (+) | (/) | (/) | Medium |
| King (2004) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (/) | (+) | (+) | High |
| McCauley Ohannessian (2010) | (0) | (+) | (+) | (/) | (+) | (+) | High |
| Peleg-Oren (2008) | (0) | (+) | (0) | (/) | (0) | (0) | Medium |
| Pilowsky (2004) | (0) | (+) | (0) | (/) | (0) | (0) | Medium |
| Sheridan (2011) | (0) | (-) | (0) | (/) | (0) | (0) | Low |
| Yau (2012) | (0) | (+) | (+) | (/) | (0) | (0) | Medium |
Note. (+) criterion fulfilled; (0) missing information/not clear; (-) criterion not met; (/) not applicable
Results of the systematic review.
| Protective factors | Description | First author (year) | Children’s mental health outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Externalizing/ internalizing problems | Consumption/abuse of alcohol or other drugs | |||
| Psychological factors | Adaptive use of primary and secondary control coping | McCauley Ohannessian (2008) | + | |
| Approach coping strategies | Pilowsky (2004) | - | ||
| Ability to engage adults | Conners-Burrow (2013) | + | ||
| Biological factors | Increased activation of the OFG and left insula | Heitzeg (2008) | + | |
| Blunted NAcc response | Yau (2012) | + | ||
| Family factors | Family cohesion and adaptability | El-Sheikh (2003) | + | |
| Peleg-Oren (2008) | - | |||
| Secure parent-child attachment | Brook (2003) | - | ||
| Edwards (2006) | + | |||
| El-Sheikh (2003) | + | |||
| Parental factors | Low parenting stress | Pilowsky (2004) | + | |
| Accepting mother; high mother’s and low father’s controlling parenting style | Peleg-Oren (2008) | + | ||
| Parental support | King (2004) | + | ||
| Presence of a father in addition to a mother | Conners-Burrow (2013) | + | ||
| Social factors | Social support | Pilowsky (2004) | + | |
| Sheridan (2011) | + | |||
Note. + = statistically significant positive association; - = No statistically significant association.