Levels and predictors of participation in integrated treatment programs for pregnant and parenting women with problematic substance use

Women who are seeking services for problematic substance use are often also balancing responsibilities of motherhood. Integrated treatment programs were developed to address the diverse needs of women, by offering a holistic and comprehensive mix of services that are trauma- and violence-informed, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC public health 2019-02, Vol.19 (1), p.154-154, Article 154
Hauptverfasser: Le, Thao Lan, Kenaszchuk, Chris, Milligan, Karen, Urbanoski, Karen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Women who are seeking services for problematic substance use are often also balancing responsibilities of motherhood. Integrated treatment programs were developed to address the diverse needs of women, by offering a holistic and comprehensive mix of services that are trauma- and violence-informed, and focus on maternal and child health promotion and the development of healthy relationships. Using system-level administrative data from a suite of outpatient integrated programs in Ontario, Canada, we described the clients and rates and predictors of treatment participation over a 7-year period (2008-2014; N = 5162). All participants were either pregnant or parenting children under 6 years old at admission to treatment. Retention (length of time between the first and last visit) averaged 124.9 days (SD = 185.6), with episodes consisting of 14.6 visits (SD = 28.6). The vast majority of women attended more than one visit (87.2%), typically returning within 2 weeks (mean 12.3 days, SD = 11.1). In addition to being pregnant or new mothers experiencing problematic substance use, most were unemployed, on social assistance, and single. Programs appeared to be able to successfully engage most women in treatment once they accessed the programs. Although rates of treatment participation did vary across subgroups defined by sociodemographic and admission characteristics, effect sizes tended to be small on average, providing little evidence in general of sociodemographic inequities in participation. Further work is needed to study the influence of program-level factors on participation, and how these link to maternal and child outcomes.
ISSN:1471-2458
1471-2458
DOI:10.1186/s12889-019-6455-4