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Opioid Use Disorder, Attachment, and Parenting: Key Concerns for Practitioners

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Abstract

In the United States, the current epidemic of opioid use disorders impacts many parents and their children. Historically, interventions for parents with substance use disorders have focused on two separate areas, achieving and maintaining abstinence and learning parenting skills. These interventions do not address the parent/child relationship, and the impact of parental opioid use disorder on attachment. Insecure attachment, particularly disorganized attachment, negatively affects the child’s development and safety. Attachment should always be considered when doing a safety assessment or planning an intervention for parents with opioid use disorders. This conceptual paper describes the impact of parental opioid use on attachment across the developmental span of childhood, highlighting research about opioid use disorder, parenting, and attachment which is relevant for practitioners working with parents with opioid use disorders, as child protection workers, substance abuse counselors, or therapists. Identification, attachment assessment tools, and empirical research on attachment-based interventions are discussed.

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Mirick, R.G., Steenrod, S.A. Opioid Use Disorder, Attachment, and Parenting: Key Concerns for Practitioners. Child Adolesc Soc Work J 33, 547–557 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10560-016-0449-1

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