Family-Based Treatment for Parental Substance Abuse and Child Maltreatment
Substance Abuse, Child Abuse, Child Neglect
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Substance Abuse focused on measuring Substance Abuse, Child Maltreatment, Multisystemic Therapy, Child Trauma
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- An allegation of parental physical abuse and/or neglect of a child was received by DCF child protective services, and DCF has decided that the information collected is sufficient to conclude that maltreatment occurred.
- The report of physical abuse and/or neglect came to DCF child protective services within the past 180 days.
- The maltreating parent met diagnostic criteria for a substance abuse disorder as assessed with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID-I/P; First, Spitzer, Gibbon, & Williams, 2002).
- The maltreated child was between the ages of 6 and 17 years.
Exclusion Criteria:
Families will be excluded if either of these criteria are met:
- Child protective services has a confirmed report of current and ongoing physical or sexual violence by one parent or caregiver toward another parent or caregiver (i.e., active domestic violence).
- Child protective services has a confirmed report that a child in the home is actively being sexually abused by a parent or caregiver who is in the home (i.e., active child sexual abuse).
Sites / Locations
- Connecticut Department of Children and Families
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
MST-BSF
Comprehensive Community Treatment
MST-BSF integrates two models with empirical support for their effectiveness, MST-CAN for child maltreatment (Swenson, Schaeffer, Henggeler, Faldowski, & Mayhew, 2012) and RBT for adult substance abuse (Tuten, Jones, Schaeffer, Wong, & Stitzer, 2012) into one comprehensive treatment package. MST-BSF is intended to be comprehensive. The major interventions within the MST-BSF arm include safety planning and implementation, functional analysis of the abuse incident, cognitive behavioral interventions for PTSD symptomatology and low anger management, family communication and problem solving, abuse clarification, and Reinforcement Based Treatment for adult substance abuse. RBT is an incentive-based drug treatment program for adults who abuse opiates, cocaine, or other illicit drugs.
Families randomized to the CCT condition receive an array of services consistent with existing DCF practices. Project Safe community providers offer individual, couples, and family therapy for substance abuse/dependence, early intervention groups, treatment for co-occurring disorders, gender-specific trauma/substance abuse groups, and relapse prevention groups. The DCF caseworker also is responsible for coordinating care for the behavioral and mental health needs of the children. Services include individual outpatient treatment, family therapy, intensive in-home treatment, extended day programs, intensive outpatient, partial and inpatient hospitalization, residential programs/temporary housing (safe homes, shelters), emergency mobile psychiatric services, and crisis stabilization.