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Parental substance misuse and child care social work: findings from the first stage of a study of 100 families

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Parental substance misuse and child care social work: findings from the first stage of a study of 100 families. / Forrester, Donald; Harwin, Judith.
In: Child and Family Social Work, Vol. 11, No. 4, 11.2006, p. 325-335.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Forrester D, Harwin J. Parental substance misuse and child care social work: findings from the first stage of a study of 100 families. Child and Family Social Work. 2006 Nov;11(4):325-335. Epub 2006 Apr 11. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2206.2006.00415.x

Author

Forrester, Donald ; Harwin, Judith. / Parental substance misuse and child care social work : findings from the first stage of a study of 100 families. In: Child and Family Social Work. 2006 ; Vol. 11, No. 4. pp. 325-335.

Bibtex

@article{bac54600291748e5b8fece02a5a7d204,
title = "Parental substance misuse and child care social work: findings from the first stage of a study of 100 families",
abstract = "Parental misuse of drugs or alcohol is known to be a common issue for child care social workers, yet there has been surprisingly little British research on the topic. The study reported here attempts to address this gap. All files going for long-term allocation in four London boroughs over on average 1 year were examined (290 files). Parental substance misuse (PSM) emerged as a major feature of social work caseloads. Of the 290 cases, 100 (34%) involved concerns about parental substance misuse. The families involving substance misuse were more vulnerable on a variety of measures: the children were younger, the parents had more individual problems and the families lived in more difficult social situations. PSM cases tended to be 'heavy end' at the point of allocation: they accounted for 62% of all children subject to care proceedings and 40% of those placed on the child protection register. There was a fairly even spread between alcohol and drug misuse, and a number of cases involved both. Substance misuse specialists were rarely involved in working with families, primarily because parents said that they did not think that they had a problem. Suggestions for ways in which policy and practice with PSM might be improved are made in light of these findings.",
keywords = "Alcohol, Drugs, Parental substance misuse, Social work",
author = "Donald Forrester and Judith Harwin",
year = "2006",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1111/j.1365-2206.2006.00415.x",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "325--335",
journal = "Child and Family Social Work",
issn = "1356-7500",
publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Parental substance misuse and child care social work

T2 - findings from the first stage of a study of 100 families

AU - Forrester, Donald

AU - Harwin, Judith

PY - 2006/11

Y1 - 2006/11

N2 - Parental misuse of drugs or alcohol is known to be a common issue for child care social workers, yet there has been surprisingly little British research on the topic. The study reported here attempts to address this gap. All files going for long-term allocation in four London boroughs over on average 1 year were examined (290 files). Parental substance misuse (PSM) emerged as a major feature of social work caseloads. Of the 290 cases, 100 (34%) involved concerns about parental substance misuse. The families involving substance misuse were more vulnerable on a variety of measures: the children were younger, the parents had more individual problems and the families lived in more difficult social situations. PSM cases tended to be 'heavy end' at the point of allocation: they accounted for 62% of all children subject to care proceedings and 40% of those placed on the child protection register. There was a fairly even spread between alcohol and drug misuse, and a number of cases involved both. Substance misuse specialists were rarely involved in working with families, primarily because parents said that they did not think that they had a problem. Suggestions for ways in which policy and practice with PSM might be improved are made in light of these findings.

AB - Parental misuse of drugs or alcohol is known to be a common issue for child care social workers, yet there has been surprisingly little British research on the topic. The study reported here attempts to address this gap. All files going for long-term allocation in four London boroughs over on average 1 year were examined (290 files). Parental substance misuse (PSM) emerged as a major feature of social work caseloads. Of the 290 cases, 100 (34%) involved concerns about parental substance misuse. The families involving substance misuse were more vulnerable on a variety of measures: the children were younger, the parents had more individual problems and the families lived in more difficult social situations. PSM cases tended to be 'heavy end' at the point of allocation: they accounted for 62% of all children subject to care proceedings and 40% of those placed on the child protection register. There was a fairly even spread between alcohol and drug misuse, and a number of cases involved both. Substance misuse specialists were rarely involved in working with families, primarily because parents said that they did not think that they had a problem. Suggestions for ways in which policy and practice with PSM might be improved are made in light of these findings.

KW - Alcohol

KW - Drugs

KW - Parental substance misuse

KW - Social work

U2 - 10.1111/j.1365-2206.2006.00415.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1365-2206.2006.00415.x

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:33749351674

VL - 11

SP - 325

EP - 335

JO - Child and Family Social Work

JF - Child and Family Social Work

SN - 1356-7500

IS - 4

ER -