300 likes | 463 Views
Extrinsic Barriers to Substance Abuse Treatment Among Pregnant Drug Dependent Women. Marty Jessup RN, PhD Institute for Health Policy Studies University of California, San Francisco American Public Health Association October 22, 2001. Acknowledgements. National Research Service Award
E N D
Extrinsic Barriers to Substance Abuse Treatment Among Pregnant Drug Dependent Women Marty Jessup RN, PhD Institute for Health Policy Studies University of California, San Francisco American Public Health Association October 22, 2001
Acknowledgements National Research Service Award National Institute of Nursing Research, NIH No. 5F31 NRO7440-03 and National Institute on Drug Abuse San Francisco Treatment Research Traineeship No.P50 DA09253
Inclusion Criteria • in residential substance abuse treatment • pregnant (> 24 wks. GA) or parenting (0-12 mos.) • 18 years of age
Recruitment • flyers posted in 15 perinatal programs • phone screen • $25 retail gift certificate
Study Participants n = 36 • 12 pregnant 24 with an infant < 12 mos. • 20 African-American 8 White 7 Latina 1 Native American
Participants (cont’d) Mean Range Age 30.02 (± 5.8 S.D) 19 - 43 Sober time 18.4 weeks (±20.1 S.D.) 1 - 88 GA @ entry tx 17.0 weeks (±14.3 S.D.) 1 - 40 GA @ entry pnc 15.2 weeks (± 9.3 S.D.) 1 - 32
Participants (cont’d)n = 36 • Primary Drug n Cocaine 16 Alcohol 6 Heroin 6 Methamphetamine 5 Cocaine/marijuana 2 Psychedelics 1
Participants cont’dn = 36 n % Homeless 13 36 Violence from partners 7 19 Incarcerations 11 31 Sudden/violent death exp. 9 25 Unplanned pregnancy 33 92 Past child relinquishment 24 66 Methadone maintenance 4 11
Mode of Entry to Treatment n = 24 Mode n Jail/court 7 Child welfare 6 Prenatal care 6 Voluntary self-referrals 5
Mode of Entry to Prenatal Caren = 35 Mode n Voluntary self-referral 22 Jail medical services 8 Treatment contract 5
Data Collection • Demographic information sheet • Semi-structured life history: “Tell me about the period of time before you went into treatment” • Probes: How did you learn you were pregnant? How did you get to prenatal care? How did you get to treatment?
Analysis (Mandelbaum, 1973) • Dimensions • Turnings • Adaptation
Trustworthiness Credibility Transferabilty Dependability Confirmabilty
Dimensions MandelbaumJessup Biological Gender: pregnancy and childbirth Drug dependency Socio-cultural Maternal role stipulations Psycho-social Fear: arrest, incarceration, prosecution, loss of child
Turnings Pregnancy
Adaptations Protecting custody Preserving the family Talking to God Doing the right thing
Barriers Fear arrest and prosecution incarceration and loss of child Program-based Partners Opiate dependency Pregnancy
Turnings Pregnancy I love her. And I thank God for her. You know, I think He knows that I’m ready to have it…be a mom again and that’s good. He’s giving me another chance. Ivy, single mother, recovering crack addicted woman
Socio-cultural Dimension Criminality vs. disease model Socially stipulated roles Impact on : care-seeking child custody social relations
Fear I had heard so many horror stories about people coming up positive and not even seeing their baby ever, just having the baby taken straight from the hospital. And I thought that was what was going to happen to me… Nina, 19 year old recovering heroin dependent woman
Fear I didn’t tell him [physician] the full story…He might turn me in…to CPS. Maisha, 29 year old mother of a 10 month old baby
Fear Knowing that they were gonna test me for drugs, that’s what scared me…they said if you don’t go into treatment, your baby will be taken away from you…That’s why I didn’t go to prenatal care…I didn’t want to lose my baby. Emily, a 23 year old heroin dependent woman
AdaptationPreserving the Family Compliance with child welfare Voluntary relinquishments
Discussion • Gendered impact of the War on Drugs • Transformation of the therapeutic alliance • Deterrent effects of fear • Collaborative harm from helpers
Discussion • Conflicts arise when help becomes harm • Delay re-conceptualized • Institutional readiness • Advocacy for therapeutic practice
Implications Health Policy Renewed Public Dialogue Fetal Protection = Maternal Protection Systems Collaboration Advocacy Treatment Barrier Reduction Child Welfare System Evaluation Access is a Social Justice Issue
Implications Clinical Practice Education Standards of Practice Disclosure Interdisciplinary Collaborations Legal Protections
Limitations of the Study In-treatment sample MH status unknown In-residence setting Short time of sobriety
Future Research Impact of punitive policy Influencing factors of tx entry Helping institutions and personnel Domestic violence Treatment utilization trend analysis
Epilogue I: So . . . What would you say? S: There’s a place you can go in with your pregnancy. You have room and board, you would eat , you’d be with community . . .You’ll have child care. . . You’ll have a place to rest, you and the baby . . . I think it sounds good . . .