Substance Misuse Themes Among Women Living in Transitional Housing: Effects on Children, Intimate Partner Relationships, and Social Relationships.

IF 0.6 4区 医学 Q4 NURSING Journal of Addictions Nursing Pub Date : 2023-04-01 DOI:10.1097/JAN.0000000000000524
Alexa A Lopez, Anne E Dressel, Emily Deal, Emma Krueger, Maria Graf, Belinda Pittman, Marin Schmitt, Peninnah Kako, Brittany Ochoa-Nordstrum, Lucy Mkandawire-Valhmu
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract: Traditional substance misuse treatments have not always taken women or marginalized populations into consideration. A holistic approach that addresses how drugs may be used to cope with trauma caused by violence, poverty, and neglect as well as employment of engagement strategies that connect populations with culturally relevant support systems are key, especially in treating African American women. As substance misuse rates rise among African American women, characterizing how this may influence or be influenced by relationships (such as with children, intimate partners, and social relations) is especially important in the context of effective treatment. The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine the themes surrounding substance misuse and close relationships among women previously enrolled in a transitional housing treatment program grounded in social support. Many women discussed how the program itself was an impetus in addressing not only their own substance use but also intergenerational substance use within their families. Women also noted how relationships with their children were vastly different pretreatment compared with during and after treatment, specifically emphasizing a positive improvement. Regarding intimate relationships, African American women learned to establish assertiveness and navigate healthier social relationships, all while sustaining drug abstinence. It is important to acknowledge the role of the healthcare professional in ensuring effective and culturally relevant treatment for African American women; nursing curricula should include evidence-based practice education and training on mental health and substance misuse specific to marginalized communities to more deeply understand the complex intersections of substance misuse, poverty, and social relationships in the lives of women.

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居住在过渡性住房中的妇女药物滥用主题:对儿童、亲密伴侣关系和社会关系的影响。
摘要:传统的药物滥用治疗并不总是考虑到妇女或边缘人群。解决如何使用药物来应对暴力、贫困和忽视造成的创伤的整体方法,以及将人口与文化相关的支持系统联系起来的参与策略的采用是关键,特别是在治疗非裔美国妇女方面。随着非裔美国妇女药物滥用率的上升,在有效治疗的背景下,描述这种情况如何影响或受关系(如与子女、亲密伴侣和社会关系)的影响尤为重要。本定性研究的目的是研究在社会支持的过渡住房治疗项目中登记的妇女之间围绕药物滥用和密切关系的主题。许多妇女讨论了该方案本身是如何推动不仅解决她们自己的药物使用问题,而且解决家庭内代际药物使用问题的。妇女们还指出,与治疗期间和治疗后相比,她们与孩子的关系有很大的不同,特别强调了积极的改善。在亲密关系方面,非裔美国女性学会了建立自信,在更健康的社会关系中航行,同时保持戒毒。必须承认保健专业人员在确保非洲裔美国妇女获得有效和与文化相关的治疗方面的作用;护理课程应包括针对边缘化社区的心理健康和药物滥用的循证实践教育和培训,以更深入地了解妇女生活中药物滥用、贫困和社会关系的复杂交叉点。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
68
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Addictions Nursing (JAN) – JAN is the official journal of IntNSA and is a peer-reviewed quarterly international journal publishing original articles on current research issues, practices and innovations as they related to the field of addictions. Submissions are solicited from professional nurses and other health-care professionals engaged in treatment, prevention, education, research and consultation. Each issue of the Journal of Addictions Nursing contains original full-length papers as well as several regular features sections: · Perspectives features points of view and commentaries on relevant issues · Media Watch provides summaries and critiques of print and digital resources. · Innovative Roles examines unique roles that nurses in addictions are implementing · Research Reviews offers summaries and critiques of research studies in the field
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