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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
June
Study elicits 'child's eye'
view of methamphetamine abuse and its effects
Craig Chamberlain,
News Editor
217-333-2894; cdchambe@uiuc.edu
6/12/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Part
of the team involved in the ongoing University of
Illinois research project on methamphetamine use in
seven Central Illinois counties: (sitting) Teresa
Ostler, professor of social work; (from left) Rebecca
Jones, retired DCFS professional supervising aspects
of the project; Anne Robertson, Kathryn Sheridan,
Marcia Martinez and Ga-young Choi, all doctoral students
involved with the project; and Wendy Haight, professor
of social work and the lead researcher on the project.
Missing from the photo are study co-authors James
Black, a psychiatrist with Southern Illinois University
School of Medicine, and Linda Kingery, a child-welfare
worker in the Charleston field office of DCFS. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— The children’s stories are distressing: They had been
left alone and hungry for days, were physically abused, forced to get
high, told to steal from loved ones and to lie to authorities, and they
had seen their parents “hyper” and delusional.
They had been traumatized, many of them, but they had also been resourceful
and resilient. All had been taken from their rural homes and were now
in foster care, with some struggling to adjust and some doing remarkably
well.
They are the children of methamphetamine users, and they were the subject
of a study, apparently the first, to get a child’s-eye view of
what happens in these families and how it affects the children.
“We’re not aware of other studies that look at the effects
of being reared in a methamphetamine-involved family on children’s
psychological development,” said Wendy Haight, a professor of
social work at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and the lead researcher.
The study will be published in the journal Children and Youth Services
Review (CYSR).
The aim of the study was to gather information that could help these
children and others like them in the often-difficult adjustment to foster
care and beyond, Haight said.
“We want to help foster parents understand more about what the
child has gone through,” said study co-author Teresa Ostler, a
social work professor at Illinois who specializes in clinical psychology.
“A lot of it involves experiences of trauma, where the child needs
huge help in putting things together and in making sense, in knowing
that their feelings have reasons.”
The study involved 18 children, ages 7-14, from 12 families. All were
involved with the child-welfare system because of their parents’
methamphetamine abuse. At the time of their interviews, they had been
in foster care anywhere from five to 39 months, with 15.6 months the
average.
The central focus of the study were semi-structured interviews with
each child, conducted by a psychiatrist or child clinical psychologist,
which lasted about 30 minutes and were audiotaped. The interviews were
then transcribed and coded by other researchers to produce specific
data.
Methamphetamine can have profound effects on the user, Haight said,
including extreme irritability, paranoia and heightened sexual arousal.
Users can go on days-long highs, followed by days of sleep. “These
are adults behaving in very unpredictable, dangerous ways, and the child
is there too,” she said.
In most of these families, parents also were making the drug, sometimes
involving their children in criminal behavior, and possibly exposing
some to toxic fumes and the danger of explosions or fires.
“Meth has such a rapid effect that you see parenting just break
down literally,” Ostler said. “Families change rapidly in
that time and I think that’s very terrifying for children,”
she said.
Yet despite those conditions, the researchers found that when the children
were asked about “sad or scary times,” they talked first
or most often about the experience of losing their parents, even months
later, Haight said. “Most want desperately to be with their families
and feel a great deal of pain and grief over being separated from their
parents.”
Another complication is that some of these children had taken on the
role of caring for their parents, as well as younger siblings, when
their parents were under the influence. One child asked who would watch
over her mother when she was “sick,” Haight said. They also
experience emotional harm from the stigma of being the children of methamphetamine
users, many of whom face years in prison.
The children often also carry a strong distrust of authority figures,
passed on from their parents as a result of the criminal activity involved,
sometimes reinforced by a meth-induced paranoia. Some have been actively
socialized into a rural drug culture. “It becomes a huge blockage”
to intervention in some cases, Ostler said.
For children raised from an early age with their parents using methamphetamine,
even routine aspects of family life, like regular meal and bed times,
may represent “culture shock,” the authors say.
The researchers are using what they’ve learned from this study
and previous research to develop materials for use not only by foster
parents, but also by child-welfare workers and other professionals.
“We get more requests than we can accommodate from people just
desperate for some information,” Haight said.
They also are conducting weekly sessions, or interventions, in the foster
homes of the children who took part in the study, with support from
the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. They are working
to develop a model in which local professionals are the ones directly
involved with the families, but with supervision from university psychologists
and psychiatrists.
As a result of the study, the researchers suggest that additional resources
and services, in particular mental health services, need to be more
accessible for these children and their foster parents.
Haight also pointed out that teachers in rural schools are often the
first to know and get involved when methamphetamine abuse comes into
a family, giving children everything from extra attention to food and
clothes. With additional funding, the schools could play a larger role,
she said.
Even with what many of these children have dealt with, Haight stressed
that they are not just passive victims. “Not only have they experienced
these horrible situations, but they survived, and you can’t help
having some respect for that,” she said. They responded in a variety
of ways, and were often very resourceful in the process, she said.
The study is part of an ongoing U. of I. research project, also led
by Haight, in seven Central Illinois counties (Clark, Coles, Cumberland,
Douglas, Edgar, Moultrie and Shelby). The counties are served by the
Charleston field office of DCFS, which is collaborating on the project.
The research was funded by an Arnold O. Beckman Award from the University
Research Board at Illinois.
Other co-authors of the study were James Black, a psychiatrist with
the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine in Springfield;
Linda Kingery, a child-welfare worker in the Charleston field office
of DCFS; and Kathryn Sheridan, a graduate student in social work.
The CYSR article, titled "A Child's-Eye View of Parent Methamphetamine
Abuse: Implications for Helping Foster Families to Succeed," is
currently "in press." An earlier
study from the project was published in the August 2005 issue of
CYSR.
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