Parental Substance Abuse and Child Welfare
Download
Report
Transcript Parental Substance Abuse and Child Welfare
Parental Substance Abuse and
Child Welfare: Promising
Programs for Early Intervention
and Permanency
Claire Houston
S.J.D. Candidate, Harvard Law School
Objectives
Discuss entry issues related to parental substance
abuse
Focus: referral requirement under Child Abuse
Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA) (2003 and
2010 amendments)
Secondary focus: Family Drug Treatment Courts
targeting substance-exposed infants
Parental Substance Abuse
and Child Maltreatment
Significant problem for child welfare system
Prevalence:
Related to 60% of abuse and neglect
50-79% of children taken into foster care
Poor outcomes for children:
Enter care at a younger age
Stay in foster care system longer
Lower rates of reunification
More likely to re-enter child welfare system following
reunification
Substance-exposed infants fare worse
Substance-Abusing Parents
Have Multiple Problems
Co-occurring problems: poverty, mental health
issues/past trauma, domestic violence, low educational
achievement
Access to treatment issues
Difficulties with treatment enrollment and retention
Relapse common
Reports to Child Welfare
1. Allegation of abuse or neglect
2. Substance-exposed infants (SEI’s)
•
CAPTA: required referral for any infant, “identified as
being affected by illegal substance abuse or withdrawal
symptoms resulting from prenatal drug exposure or Fetal
Alcohol Spectrum Disorder”
Reporting SubstanceExposed Infants (CAPTA)
Rationale: “identify infants at risk of child abuse and
neglect so appropriate services can be delivered to the
infant and mother to provide for the safety of the child”
Tool for early intervention – prevent maltreatment
Problems with CAPTA
1. Alcohol provision limited
2. Does not establish definition of child abuse
•
•
Limits CPS involvement
At least 15 states define prenatal substance exposure as
abuse or neglect
3. “Identification” issue
Under-reporting and
Biased Reporting (CAPTA)
Inadequacies in screening
Risk of under-reporting
Inconsistencies in testing (among hospitals, within
hospitals)
Risk of biased reporting
Risk of under-reporting of non-minority infants
Best option: legally mandated, universal testing
Family Drug Treatment Courts
(FDTC’s)
Aims:
1. Get parent off drugs, deal with co-occurring problems
•
•
Collaboration with treatment providers
Monitor compliance
2. Promote faster permanency for children
FDTC’s as a Tool of Early
Intervention?
Traditional FDTC
Intervene once maltreatment has occurred
FDTC’s geared at substance-exposed infants
Intervene prior to maltreatment
Work with hospitals, CPS – reporting key
Problems with CAPTA may limit the ability of these courts
to prevent maltreatment
Questions or comments
can be directed to:
Claire Houston
[email protected]