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National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse: Whole family support - families and recovery. Whole family support - families and recovery. Emma Pawson Families and Young People Manager. National Policy Context. Families already key element of new Drugs Strategy and recovery agenda
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National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse: Whole family support - families and recovery Whole family support - families and recovery Emma Pawson Families and Young People Manager
National Policy Context • Families already key element of new Drugs Strategy and recovery agenda • The Munro Review calls upon adult services to respond to the needs of the whole family
Parental Substance Misuse • Drugs: 34% clients in drug treatment are living with a child; a further 18% have children not currently living with them • Alcohol: Up to 3 million children live with a dependent drinker • Safeguarding: Alcohol is a factor in 50% child protection cases; drugs and alcohol a factor in three out of four serious case reviews. The adult is often not in treatment. • Offending: 162,000 children have a parent in prison • Poor outcomes: Parental drug misuse doesn’t automatically mean poor parenting, but their children often have poor outcomes • Looked After Children:A sixth of under 18s in treatment are Looked After Children (unpublished data from 1st Quarter of 2011-12)
Bottling it Up: The Next Generation • 2.6 millionchildrenin the UK are living with a parent who drinks at hazardous levels. • Around 33,000 adults who are in treatment for alcohol problems also have parental responsibilities. • Between 2010 and 2011, 12,248 people used Turning Point's alcohol treatment services and nearly half (5,326) were parents, of whom more than a third (1,925) were mothers. • The average alcohol consumption of parents was 30 units per day - 24 for mothers and 33 for fathers. • Turning Point, December 2011
Treatment Completions Parent: 303 day episode on average for planned, 221 day planned. Not parent: 268 day episode on average for planned, 237 day unplanned
Treatment strengthens local safeguarding and family support work • Families with multiple needs require multi agency support to keep children safe and to maximise their life chances • But, multi agency response can only be realised with support of Health and Well-being Boards, DCS, DPH and LCSB • Recovery-focused drug treatment delivered in collaboration with children’s and adult social care reduces safeguarding risks and helps addicted parents stabilise, recover and look after their children
Recovery is the goal • Whole family approach • Build families strengths and resilience to help them thrive in independence and a healthy and safe environment • Have parental status in mind at all times- from early assessment – family assessment tools and care plans , risk assessments • Multi agency response – reduce duplication • Joint work with FIPs • Joint work and pathways with social care • Work with family centres, health visitors, sure start etc • Flexible treatment responses to family needs e.g. parental care plans
Recovery parental treatment options – recovery groups , parenting groups, whole family recovery panels Recovery advocates – peer mentors Change stigma and culture Enhance skills and confidence of workers Family recovery champions Workforce