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Between a rock and a hard place – How parents deal with children who use substances and perpetrate abuse 2011/12/13

Background Substance Use stats

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Between a rock and a hard place – How parents deal with children who use substances and perpetrate abuse 2011/12/13. Background Substance Use stats. Up to 350,000 children are affected by drug use, up to 1.3 million children affected by alcohol use (government figures) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Background Substance Use stats

Between a rock and a hard place –How parents deal with children who use

substances and perpetrate abuse2011/12/13

Page 2: Background Substance Use stats

Background Substance Use stats

Up to 350,000 children are affected by drug use, up to 1.3 million children affected by alcohol use (government figures)

Up to 8 million family members, including partners, affected by someone else’s drug or alcohol use (Velleman and Templeton 2007)

44% perpetrators under the influence of alcohol, 12% drugs (BCS Review)

Alcohol thought to be a factor in at least one third of all domestic violence assaults (Finney 2004)

Page 3: Background Substance Use stats

Background Domestic Violence stats

Women experiencing DV are 15 times more likely to misuse alcohol, 9 times misuse drugs (Barron 2004)

1 in 4 children said that they had witnessed DV between adult family members. 47% of incidents involved physical assaults, 13% with an object or weapon (NSPCC survey 2007)

Children witness ¾ of abusive incidents (Royal College Psych. 2004)

Based on a large volume of research, child care law now includes witnessing or hearing the ill treatment of someone else as causing harm to children

Page 4: Background Substance Use stats

Adfam/AVA collaboration - background

• Project One – 2010/11• Research conducted by Dr Sarah Galvani• DVD resource kit for practitioners working with young

people affected by DV and SU – ‘Thinking it Through’• Comic Relief funded• Project Two – 2011/12• Research into parents affected by child to parent violence

(CPV) from SU children, with focus groups around England and training developed

• Department of Health funded

Page 5: Background Substance Use stats

How parents deal with children who use substances and perpetrate abuse

Interviews with 88 victims of CPV from substance using children.

Project report and executive summary available athttp://www.adfam.org.uk/news/265

Project Two – Between a rock and a hard place(2011/12)

Page 6: Background Substance Use stats

Meet the parents…

Nine focus groups with 88 parentsGroups facilitated by existing Family Support GroupsAges of children ranged from 11- late 40’s (although

teen years are when it mostly began). Most were sons.

For a significant number of parents, there was a background of domestic violence

Far more mothers than fathers (88%) and many single parents. 95% identified as white British.

Page 7: Background Substance Use stats

About the abuse

• Parents reported emotional abuse, financial exploitation, death threats, serious physical assaults with weapons, destruction of property in the home and social isolation caused by emotional manipulation

‘I’ve had text messages saying he’ll have his legs broken if we don’t pay £500 by this Friday and we’ve got ourselves into serious debt ‘

• Impacts on parents included: Worry, fear, lack of sleep, and profound emotional distress for all parents, serious financial worries, prolonged involvement with the criminal justice system and admissions to hospital with CPV-related injuries.

Page 8: Background Substance Use stats

Context 1

• Significant majority took a long time to find help • Many parents felt guilty, or that they had failed in the

parenting role, and that the behaviour of their children was at least partly their fault. Some of the mothers identified past domestic violence that had taken place in the family.

‘I still cry buckets over my son because I’m frightened he’s going to die before me’

‘I one hundred per cent totally believe it was my fault - the partner I had at the time abused him’

Page 9: Background Substance Use stats

Context 2

Many spoke of the double stigma they faced in society from both the drug use and the violence they experienced. Parents were often scared of admitting what they were experiencing to professionals, but also to their own neighbours, families and friends.

‘One of my mates said ‘it’s because you’re a one-parent mother’

‘That guilt is crippling, it’s absolutely crippling ‘

Page 10: Background Substance Use stats

Context 3

Knowing what to call CPV and how to conceptualise it was very problematic for parents.

‘You don’t label it that [domestic violence], not until you start speaking to somebody and you start thinking then actually this isn’t normal, this isn’t what my sixteen, seventeen year old son should be doing, although you do know it, it’s strange, it’s actually only when you hear those words you think that’s actually it, and it sounds really dumb, it sounds really stupid, maybe that’s part of the denial’

Page 11: Background Substance Use stats

Barriers to finding support 1

• Lack of awareness of existing support – especially family support groups

‘I rang them [drug clinic] and they said yes, we can give him an appointment… four weeks ahead. And I remember thinking ‘he could be dead by then’

• Parents not seeing themselves as legitimate recipients of support

Page 12: Background Substance Use stats

Barriers to finding support 2

• Lack of awareness of drugs / signs ‘I used to think addicts were from bad families’• Didn’t think it would happen to them ‘You don’t expect your own child to turn on you’ • Lack of consensus on the best course of action within

couples. ‘If you have a spouse, you’re not always feeling the

same’

Page 13: Background Substance Use stats

Barriers to finding support 3

Stigma and shame – including from own family members

‘You can talk to strangers when you can’t talk to your own family, I get too upset. My twin sister doesn’t know my son is a drug addict and he’s been an addict for 20 years and she doesn’t know and she’ll come tomorrow, she’s coming on Friday and I want to tell her but I don’t, I feel ashamed.’

Page 14: Background Substance Use stats

First disclosures

• No clear pathways taken by most. First professionals included: GP (most popular); police (prompted by criminal act or from desperation);. internet (especially Frank)

• Looking for: sign-posting, reassurance, a shoulder to cry on and practical strategies on arguing, avoiding conflict etc. Some parents asked for help for behaviour difficulties rather than substance use

‘Support is needed at the beginning when trouble is just brewing rather than further down the line when it’s more extreme’

‘Emotional support from someone neutral’

‘Someone to say ‘it’s not your fault’’

‘I was looking for strategy more than anything’

Page 15: Background Substance Use stats

Negative experiences of seeking support 1

• Confidentiality issues ‘I have no access to anything because of data

protection’

• ‘General feeling of failure of services / not listening ‘Services ‘treat carers like a piece of dirt – do not want

to know, no empathy’

Page 16: Background Substance Use stats

Negative experiences of seeking support 2

• Lack of partnership work / joined up services ‘The mental health professionals and the drug and

alcohol professionals don’t mix, they don’t work together…they pass the buck like something not right, badmouth each other’s services, talk a load of waffle and run rings around you’

• Lack of empathy ‘Blame was laid at our door as parents’

Page 17: Background Substance Use stats

Specific examples of negative responses from:

Social ServicesChurchPoliceProbationHospital staffGPYOTPsychiatristsAl-Anon

BUT…..

Page 18: Background Substance Use stats

Positive experiences of support

• Parent Support Groups• Police• GPs• Ambulance staff and paramedics• Social Services• AA• Counselling• Church

Page 19: Background Substance Use stats

Types of help that are valued

Welcoming atmosphereFeeling of acceptance rather than judgementMeeting others and sharing of experiencesBeing able to be honest and not have to worry about shocking

othersA space to think about themselvesReassurance re. their perspectiveEncouragement to stick with boundariesReducing isolationTo be treated as a concerned and loving family member and

not the cause of the problem / acknowledgement that they’re trying their best

Page 20: Background Substance Use stats

Conclusions 1

Many factors are very similar to partner violence but…

Not naming it as abuse / domestic violence Unwilling to involve CJSParent-child bond seen as unbreakable / still taboo to admit

not liking your childHuge amounts of shame, stigma and self-blameLack of information / adviceRisk not recognised by professionalsSeems to have a particular type of pain for fathersFor some (not all) an event between ages 12-14 seems to have

been the starting pointDifficulties in distinguishing between ‘normal’ teen angst /

moodiness and a serious problem

Page 21: Background Substance Use stats

• The policy and service framework that currently exists is failing to meet the needs of parents experiencing CPV.

• What motivates children and young people to perpetrate CPV is still not fully understood.

• Children can be both victims and perpetrators. • Stigma plays a key, paralysing role in stopping families

from looking for help for themselves when abused. • Drug and alcohol family support groups are the most

highly valued sources of support for families with children who use substances and perpetrate CPV.

Conclusions 2

Page 22: Background Substance Use stats

What changes would parents recommend?

• More FSGs needed (very popular)• For schools to be involved more and signposting for families.

‘Show them this side of the nightmare’ • More powers for police • More money for trained drug and alcohol workers• Less stigma / judgement from professionals

‘Important there’s an acknowledgement that behaviours shown by teenagers aren’t always the fault of parents’

• Leaflets on drug/alcohol don’t have section for families• Listen to carers

‘Give absolute respect to anyone who is caring for somebody who is a user’ ‘Listen to us – we will give you the truth’

Page 23: Background Substance Use stats

Recommendations 1

Increase recognition of CPV at a national policy levelIncluding CPV into the standard definition of domestic

abuseIncreased awareness of CPV in family support groupsImproved multi-agency working between services

Page 24: Background Substance Use stats

Recommendations 2

Existing for a should be used better to tackle CPVEnsure grass-roots voluntary organisations are funded

to support parentsEnabling those that support families to better help

parentsSupporting the development of perpetrator

programmes for under-21s