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Your Choice for Recovery and Change

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Nelson-Zlupko, L., Dore, M. M., Kauffman, E., & Kaltenbach, K. (1996). Women in recovery: Their perceptions of treatment effectiveness. Journal of Substance Abuse ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Your Choice for Recovery and Change


1
  • Your Choice for Recovery and Change.
  • 3800 Packard Road Suite 210
  • Ann Arbor, MI 48108

2
Women and Addiction
  • Gender Responsiveness in Services for
  • Substance Use Disorders
  • Julie Cushman LMSW, ACSW, CAADC

3
Objectives
  • Identify at least three barriers that impact a
    womens ability to obtain services for substance
    use disorders.
  • Identify at least five ways the professional can
    assist in overcoming barriers to services.
  • Increase knowledge of a least three ways
    professionals can create gender responsive
    programming.

4
Need ForGender Responsive Services
  • Course of illness different than men/Telescope
    Effect
  • Females advance more rapidly escalate into
    addiction faster.
  • Metabolic differences- experience negative
    physiological consequences sooner with less use.
  • More medical, psychiatric and social
    consequences.
  • Treatment needs different more complex than
    men.
  • Co-existing psychiatric disorders
  • Parental Stress
  • Trauma History
  • Specific Barriers

5
Barriers to Treatment
6
Barriers to Treatment
  • Systemic - impede the development of services
    that respond to womens needs.
  • Structural - policies and practices at the
    service or program level that make it difficult
    for women to access substance use treatment.
  • Social, Cultural, Personal - related to the
    social and cultural norms that exist, which
    include womens roles and behavior that is
    considered appropriate womens lack of
    empowerment in many societies and societal and
    community norms and attitudes about women who
    have substance use problems.

7
Systemic Barriers
  • Lack of decision-making power
  • Limited awareness of gender differences
  • Lack of knowledge of women with substance use
    problems and their treatment needs
  • Lack of appropriate gender-responsive and
    low-cost, evidence-based treatment models
  • Differences in the organization and funding of
    health services
  • Need for a comprehensive array of services

8
Structural Barriers
  • Childcare
  • Transportation
  • Services for pregnant women
  • Location cost of treatment programs
  • Rigid program schedules
  • Waiting lists

9
Structural Barriers Continued
  • Denial of admission to women using psychoactive
    medication
  • Service coordination
  • Lack of identification, referral, intervention
    in primary care and other sectors
  • Lack of diagnosis or misdiagnosis
  • Information on treatment options
  • Physical safety

10
Social, Cultural, Personal Barriers
  • Fear of leaving children/losing custody of
    children
  • Lack of support from family or partners
  • Family history of substance abuse
  • Involvement with substance abusing partners
  • Substance use perceived as solution, not problem
  • Lack of information of services (Straussner,
    2004)
  • Lack of confidence in the effectiveness of
    treatment
  • Stigma, shame, guilt
  • Low self-esteem
  • Trauma History

11
Barriers to Intervention
Social Service Agencies
Physician
Supervisor
Attitudes Reluctance to
address Not able to assess, diagnosis Gaps in
referral network Punitive
Family
Friends
Teacher
Enforcement agencies
12
Gender Responsiveness in Outreach, Screening
Assessment
13
Outreach
  • Go where women can be found
  • Focus on reducing stigma
  • Encourage women to seek treatment by
    acknowledging their struggles as well as their
    efforts at coping in their environment
  • Love women into treatment

14
Screening and Assessment
  • Addiction is not an isolated disease
  • Women have a variety of issues and needs such as
    economic independence, gender-role expectations,
    low self worth, etc.
  • Interactions of biological, psychological,
    cognitive, social development and environmental
    variables are all considered
  • Identify benefits of harm reduction services.
  • Current instruments may not take into account
    gender differences.

15
Screening and Assessment
  • Women are heterogeneous and diverse
  • Require a comprehensive assessment to identify
    and meet individual needs that is made from a
    biopsychosocial and sociocultural perspective
  • External factors Cultural, Religion, Family,
    Peers
  • Social factors Situation, social relations,
    social structures
  • Misuse, Abuse Dependency - Result of external
  • forces that act as social stressors
    (unemployment,
  • poverty, violence, etc.)

16
Gender Responsiveness in Treatment
17
History of Substance Abuse Field
  • Developed primarily by men concerned with types
    of problems experienced more frequently by men
  • Basic assumptions and program models/services
    tend to be male responsive
  • Despite 30 years of research and advocacy, AOD
    services remain more accessible and appropriate
    for men in most locations
  • Concerns about women are often primarily related
    to pregnancy

18
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19
Evolution of Treatment
  • 1960s
  • Generic Treatment male as client
  • 1970s
  • Gender Differences biological, parenting,
    psychosocial
  • 1980s
  • Gender Specific separate facilities, childcare
    or child live-in, transportation, special groups
    or services
  • 1990s-2000s
  • Gender Responsive trauma informed, relational
    theory, strengths-based

20
Gender Responsive Treatment
  • Definition
  • Creating an environment through site selection,
    staff selection, program development, content,
    and material that reflects an understanding of
    the realities of the lives of women and girls and
    that addresses and responds to their strengths
    and challenges.
  • Source Bloom, Owen Covington (2004)

21
Guiding Principles
  • Acknowledge that gender makes a difference
  • Create an environment based on safety, respect
    and dignity
  • Develop policies, practices and programs that are
    relational and promote healthy connections to
    children, family, significant others and the
    community
  • Attend to the relevance and influence of various
    caregiver roles women often assume
  • Source Bloom, Owen, and Covington, 2003 TIP
    51 Addressing the Specific Needs of Women

22
Guiding Principles (continued)
  • Address substance use, trauma and mental health
    issues through comprehensive, integrated and
    culturally relevant services
  • Validation of behaviors that have allowed
    survival to reduce shame and guilt
  • Provide women with opportunities to improve their
    socioeconomic status
  • Recognize societal attitudes towards women who
    abuse substances stigma and stereotypes
  • Establish a system of comprehensive and
    collaborative, community services
  • Source Bloom, Owen, and Covington, 2003 TIP 51
    Addressing the Specific Needs of Women

23
Trauma Informed Services
  • Take the trauma into account
  • Avoid triggering trauma reactions and/or
    traumatizing the individual
  • Adjust the behavior of workers and the
    organization to support the individuals coping
    capacity
  • Allow survivors to manage their trauma symptoms
    successfully to promote access, retention and
    benefit from services
  • Source Fallot and Harris (2001)

24
Effective Treatment
  • Adequate treatment period is crucial
  • Individual group counseling (women only)
  • Co-occurring disorders treated in an integrated
    way
  • Medication as needed
  • Uses components of Feminist Theory,
    Self-in-Relation Theory, the Empowerment Model
    and Strengths Perspective
  • Recovery is a long term process frequently
    requires multiple treatment episodes

25
Factors That Influence Retention for Women In
Treatment
  • Supportive therapy - warmth, empathy, connection
    during crisis
  • Confrontation based on awareness, understanding
    and trust
  • Collaborative approach with client that is
    active, optimistic and builds on clients
    strengths and ability to solve problems
  • Treatment shares with client what has helped
    others in the past and client is the expert on
    what will work for her

26
Factors That Influence Retention for Women In
Treatment (Continued)
  • Type of Treatment Services
  • Gender specific groups
  • Various services all in one location
  • Initially receive greater intensive care
  • Individual counseling
  • On-site childcare and transportation
  • Therapeutic Alliance Counselor Characteristics
  • Trust Warmth vs. Problem-Solving approach
  • Female staff

27
Outcomes
  • Women in gender-specialized programs
  • Use more services throughout treatment than women
    in traditional coed program
  • Have higher rates of abstinence
  • More likely to see themselves as doing well in
    treatment
  • Twice as likely to complete gender specialized
    program
  • Source Nelson-Zupko, et al (1996), Messina et al
    (2012)

28
ACTIVITYPUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
  • Identify the types of barriers for entering and
    engaging in substance use treatment (systemic,
    structural, and cultural, social and personal
    barriers) in the following vignette and ways to
    overcome these barriers.
  • Lisa is a 28-year-old, single/never married,
    Hispanic, mother of three children (ages 2, 4, 7,
    and 10). She has a history of alcohol and
    opioid dependence and became pregnant with her
    youngest son while using Vicodin. She is
    currently taking Suboxone that she is getting
    from an ex-boyfriend. She is residing with an
    acquaintance in a rural area, has unreliable
    transportation. She has no close friendships.
    She has a family history of addiction. She called
    a substance use treatment agency in her community
    but was unable to schedule an appointment due to
    not having childcare for her youngest two
    children.

29
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30
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31
An Ideal System for AOD Prevention and
Treatment for Women
Women Informed Health Promotion Universal
Prevention
All Women
Women with Risk Factors
Women-Focused Selected Indicated Prevention
Women Developing AOD problems
Better Earlier Outreach Case Finding,
Accurate Screening and Assessment, Brief
Treatment, Engagement
More Women- Informed, Friendly
Centered Services Programs
Better Outcomes Less Relapse
Fewer Women with AOD Problems their Consequences
Assessment Fewer Barriers to Treatment
Women in Need Of Treatment
32
Questions/Comments
33
References
  • Binswanger, I. A., Merrill, J. O., Krueger, P.
    M., White, M. C., Booth, R. E., Elmore, J. G.
    (2010). Gender differences in chronic medical,
    psychiatric, and substance-dependence disorders
    among jail inmates. American Journal of Public
    Health, 100, 476-482.
  • Bloom, B., Owen B., Covington, S. (2003).
    Genders-responsive Strategies Research,
    Practice, and Guiding Principles for Women
    Offenders. Washington, DC National Institute of
    Corrections.
  • Bloom, B., Owen, B., Covington, S. (2004).
    Women offenders and gendered effects of public
    policy. Review of Policy Research, 21, 31-48.
  • Center for Disease Control http//www.cdc.gov
  • Fallot, R., and Harris, M. (2001) A
    trauma-informed approach to screening and
    assessment New Directions for Mental Health
    Services 89, 2331.
  • Grella, C. (2008). From generic to
    gender-responsive treatment Changes in social
    policies, treatment services, and outcomes of
    women in substance abuse treatment. Journal of
    Psychoactive Drugs, 40, 327-343.
  • http//www.elementsbehaviorhealth.com/addiction-tre
    atment/women-have-special-needs-in-substacne-abuse
    -treatment/
  • http//www.ncadi.samhsa.gov
  • Messina, N., Calhoun, S., and Warda, U. (2012)
    Gender-Responsive Drug Court Treatment A
    Randomized Controlled Trial. Criminal Justice and
    Behavior 39(12)1539-1558
  • National Eating Disorder Association
    http//www.nationaleatingdisorders.org
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse
    http//www.drugabuse.gov

34
References
  • Nelson-Zlupko, L., Dore, M. M., Kauffman, E.,
    Kaltenbach, K. (1996). Women in recovery Their
    perceptions of treatment effectiveness. Journal
    of Substance Abuse Treatment, 13, 51-59.
  • Sherman, Carl.,(June 2006) NIDA NOTES 20(6).
  • Straussner, S.L. (Ed.). (2004). Clinical work
    with substance-abusing clients. 2nd ed. New York
    The Guilford Press.
  • Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
    Administration http//www.samhsa.gov
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services TIP
    51-Substacne Abuse Treatment Addressing the
    Specific Needs of Women. http//www.samhsa.gov
  • Women Under the Influence. (2009, May 28). New
    York City, NY Columbia University. Retrieved
    July 24, 2009 from, http//www.casacolumbia.org/ab
    solutenm/templates/Publications.aspx?articlesid42
    1zoneid52
  • pictures/graphs obtained from Google Images
  • Resources
  • Stephanie Covington, Helping Women Recover
    allows women to examine their relationships and
    support systems
  • Lisa Najavits, Seeking Safety and Womans
    Addiction Workbook assists women in
    understanding healthy and unhealthy boundaries,
    strategies for identifying persons who can be
    positive (supportive) or negative (destructive)
    influences on their recovery, tactics for
    enhancing or minimizing those influences and
    activities to enhance support from other women
  • Monique Cohen, Counseling Addicted Women A
    Practical Guide provides client and staff
    activities surrounding relationship issues
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