2017
DOI: 10.18060/21312
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Contemporary Trauma Theory and Trauma-Informed Care in Substance Use Disorders: A Conceptual Model for Integrating Coping and Resilience

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Cited by 35 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…Additionally, the moderation analysis suggested that stronger changes were observed among adolescent boys, compared to girls. The study revealed that girls may experience more complex pathways to risk exposure situations and drug use (Ismayilova & Terlikbayeva, 2018) and, therefore, the future tailoring of this intervention should incorporate trauma-informed and gender-responsive content addressing issues related to dating and interpersonal violence and childhood abuse (Covington, 2008; Goodman, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, the moderation analysis suggested that stronger changes were observed among adolescent boys, compared to girls. The study revealed that girls may experience more complex pathways to risk exposure situations and drug use (Ismayilova & Terlikbayeva, 2018) and, therefore, the future tailoring of this intervention should incorporate trauma-informed and gender-responsive content addressing issues related to dating and interpersonal violence and childhood abuse (Covington, 2008; Goodman, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Until recently, substance use disorder interventions have rarely been trauma-informed or included concurrent treatment for mental health disorders [88,89], although both trauma activation and mental health issues may emerge when the mother abstains from substance use during pregnancy. Trauma-informed care emphasizes trustworthiness and openness throughout the entire treatment process, including elements of client safety, peer support, collaboration, cultural sensitivity, and empowerment of the client [90,91]. This approach also alleviates the stigmatization of substance-using individuals who, instead of being regarded as "deficient" or "unmotivated," are now considered from the perspective of having unresolved trauma.…”
Section: Review Of Prenatal Interventions For Substance-using Mothersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Families with SENs have unique risk factors that may require specialized approaches to support parenting and reduce child maltreatment risk. Continued substance misuse and relapse have been associated with increased risk of child maltreatment, for example (Goodman, 2017; Heffner, Blom, & Anthenelli, 2011). Unfortunately, evidence suggests that most adults who need substance use treatment do not receive it and that over 95% of adults who need but do not obtain treatment do not perceive that they need it (Park-Lee, Lipari, Hedden, Kroutil, & Porter, 2017).…”
Section: Multiple Interacting Pathways To Child Maltreatment For Families With Sensmentioning
confidence: 99%