Parents' substance use disorder can affect them or their
lives
Ability to function effectively in the role of a parent.
Ineffective
Or inconsistent parenting may be due to the following:
Mental or mental impairment due to alcohol or
alcoholism
Other drugs
The child has the ability to respond to dead signals
need
Control difficulty controlling emotions and anger
And impulse.
Disintegration of healthy parent child. Spending limited money on alcohol and drugs
Compared to food or other household needs
Spending, Creating, or Using Time
Alcohol or other drugs
AD disorder, which may result in insufficient or
Better supervision for children
And arranges with family and other social support
Family life for children with one or both parents who
misuse
Drugs or alcohol can often be disorganized and
unpredictable.
Basic needs of children including nutrition, supervision -
And upbringing, which may result
ignore. These families often experience a number
Other problems - such as mental illness, household
Violence, unemployment, and housing instability - that
Also influence parenting and contribute at a higher level
Tension
Drunk parent
The disorder may be unable to regulate stress and other
Feelings that can be impulsive and reactive
Behavior that can increase physical abuse.
Different substances may have different effects
Parenting and Safety. for example,
Threat to parent's child who is seduced
And after drinking a lot of alcohol
Threatened by a parent who performs.
Child and Adolescent Development.
Children and youth of parents who use or abuse
substances and have parenting difficulties have an
increased chance of experiencing a variety of negative
outcomes.
Poor cognitive, social, and emotional development
Depression, anxiety, and other trauma and mental
health symptoms.
Physical and health issues
Substance use problems
Parental substance use can affect the well-being of
children and youth in complex ways. For example, an
infant who receives inconsistent care and nurturing
from a parent engaged in addiction-related behaviors
may suffer from attachment difficulties that can then
interfere with the growing child’s emotional
development.
Adolescent children of parents with substance use
disorders, particularly those who have experienced child
maltreatment and foster care, may turn to substances
themselves as a coping mechanism. In addition, children
of parents with substance use issues are more likely
to experience trauma and its effects, which include
difficulties with concentration and learning, controlling
physical and emotional responses to stress, and forming
trusting relationships.
No comments:
Post a Comment