Ford Meghan K, Truong Ryan, Shakeel Ayesha, Knox Bruce, Bartels Susan, Davison Colleen, Cole Michele, Jackson Logan, Purkey Eva, Bayoumi Imaan
Department of Psychology, Queen's University, Humphrey Hall, 62 Arch Street, Kingston, ON, K7L 3N6, Canada.
Department of Family Medicine, Queen's University, 220 Bagot Street, Kingston, ON, K7L 5E9, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 Jul 16;20(7):e0327654. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0327654. eCollection 2025.
Substance use disorders (SUD) significantly impact the physical, social, and mental health of individuals, their families, and the wider community. Parental substance use can lead to long-term social and health problems for children. Examining resilience and its determinants among families directly affected by may uncover valuable insights to support families addressing SUD. The existing literature does not adequately address substance use within the context of families with young children and community resilience.
The current study aims to enhance our understanding of the daily impact of family members' direct substance use or exposure to indirect substance use within the community on children and families through qualitative interviews.
The present study was a qualitative secondary analysis. Families with a self-identified history of adversity and resilience were enrolled in the main study. The qualitative transcripts were analyzed following reflexive thematic analysis.
Six families (12 adults, 4 children) were included in the secondary analysis. The analysis generated four themes: (1) How children affect resilience in families affected by SUD; (2) Service needs of parents with SUD to enhance family resilience; (3) The role of social support in family resilience; and (4) How perceptions of safety and trust challenge community resilience.
The study highlights the significant impact of family and community on the resilience of individuals affected by SUD. It emphasizes the importance of developing addictions services and social environments that are supportive of families with young children and supports the need for services that are substance-free, inclusive, and welcoming to children. Additionally, there is a need to improve service navigation and reduce barriers to care commonly experienced by parents affected by SUD.
物质使用障碍(SUD)对个人、其家庭及更广泛社区的身体、社会和心理健康产生重大影响。父母使用物质会给孩子带来长期的社会和健康问题。研究直接受其影响的家庭中的复原力及其决定因素,可能会揭示有价值的见解,以支持家庭应对物质使用障碍。现有文献未充分探讨有幼儿家庭背景下的物质使用及社区复原力问题。
本研究旨在通过定性访谈,加深我们对家庭成员在社区中直接使用物质或接触间接物质使用对儿童和家庭的日常影响的理解。
本研究为定性二次分析。主要研究纳入了有自我认定的逆境和复原力历史的家庭。定性转录本按照反思性主题分析进行分析。
二次分析纳入了六个家庭(12名成年人,4名儿童)。分析产生了四个主题:(1)儿童如何影响受物质使用障碍影响家庭的复原力;(2)有物质使用障碍的父母增强家庭复原力的服务需求;(3)社会支持在家庭复原力中的作用;(4)对安全和信任的认知如何挑战社区复原力。
该研究突出了家庭和社区对受物质使用障碍影响的个人复原力的重大影响。强调了发展支持有幼儿家庭的成瘾服务和社会环境的重要性,并支持提供无物质、包容且欢迎儿童的服务的必要性。此外,有必要改善服务导航并减少受物质使用障碍影响的父母常见的护理障碍。