Stage I Randomized Trial of Mentalization-Based Therapy for Substance Using Mothers of Infants and Toddlers
Maternal Substance Use, Child Abuse and Neglect
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Maternal Substance Use focused on measuring parenting intervention, family intervention, maternal substance abuse, mother-child relations, parent-child relations
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: English-speaking adult women history of primary alcohol, cocaine, cannabis, club drug, or heroin abuse or dependence caring for a child between 1 and 36 months of age Exclusion criteria: acute suicidality/ homicidality severe psychiatric or substance-related symptoms requiring in-patient hospitalization or ambulatory detoxification
Sites / Locations
- The APT Foundation
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Mentalizing Therapy for Substance Using Mothers
Standard Parent Education for Substance Using Mothers
This 12 session individual therapy aims to enhance maternal reflective functioning and soften harsh and distorted mental representations about the child. The intervention adopts a developmental progression based on attachment theory, supporting the mother in her parenting role and offering assistance with basic needs. Mothers are encouraged to reflect on their thoughts and feelings and how they affect behavior. The therapist assists mother's thinking about representations of herself as a parent and encourages her to explore opportunities for new understanding of her emotional needs. Therapist and mother explore representations of her child and their relationship in detail in order to understand their meaning and promote more balanced representations and affect regulation. Therapist and mother also explore child's emotional experiences underlying behavior. The goal is to support the mother in becoming more aware of her child's emotional needs.
This 12 session comparison intervention was designed to match the Maternal Mentalizing Therapy on time spent with the counselor and maternal expectations for help with parenting. PE counselors helped mothers get connected to services (e.g. medical and pediatric care, child care and child guidance services, housing assistance, vocational training), solve problems of daily living and make parenting-related decisions. PE mothers also received a pamphlet each week on a parenting topic of their choice. Pamphlets focused on common issues in caring for infants (e.g., soothing a crying baby, managing bedtime routines, and establishing routines ) and toddlers (e.g., helping toddlers dress, managing bedtime battles, managing difficult behavior in public, and setting limits without using punishment). Pamphlets provided behavioral guidance at a 5th grade reading level without reference to underlying mental states or emotional needs.