Dysfunctional Families Prevention and Intervention

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image: young lady suffering from hangoverDysfunctional families and their prevention and intervention require closely monitored, coordinated, and managed long-term therapy, including periodic booster sessions and continual support.  

In short, it is the intensive, closely-monitored, well-managed, and comprehensive family-oriented programs that are likely to be the most productive and effective in helping high-risk and dysfunctional families raise children who abstain from alcohol or drug abuse.

The Dysfunctional Family

image: doctor talking to dysfunctional family about their teen alcoholicThe term "dysfunctional family" will be used in this discussion.  For purposes of clarity, we will define this term as follows:  A dysfunctional family is a family in which misbehavior, conflict, or abuse by individual family members takes place on a continuing basis, leading other members of the family to enable, perpetuate, and reinforce such behaviors. 

Frequently, children grow up in dysfunctional families with the belief that such behaviors and ways of interacting are "normal."

Family Factors and the Beginning of Substance Abuse

Scientific studies have demonstrated that the dynamics of inter-related psychological, social, and familiy factors play a major role in the initiation and continuation of substance abuse. 

For instance, research studies have shown that the following family-related factors are correlated to the beginning of substance abuse:

  • high sensation-seeking
  • sexual or physical abuse in childhood
  • psychosocial development (such as conduct disorders)
  • low academic performance
  • low self-esteem
  • high levels of stress and conflict
  • economic instability
  • neurotic traits
  • psychological depression
  • coercive behavior with family members
  • poor family management (such as ineffective monitoring by the parents)
  • antisocial behavior
  • dysfunctional family behaviors and interactions
  • juvenile delinquency
  • genetic propensity toward substance abuse
  • inadequate mother-infant bonding and nurturing
  • parental use of drugs and alcohol
  • relationships with peers who use drugs

Dysfunctional Families Prevention and Intervention: Family-Therapy

Some researchers have proposed a family interactional theory for explaining psychosocial aspects of adolescent substance abuse including vulnerability factors, family influences, and developmental factors.  

What these researchers have found is that the risks of peer substance use and abuse were counterbalanced by protective factors such as strong parent-child attachment, maternal adjustment, and conventional child-rearing behaviors. 

Indeed, according to the alcoholism research literature, researchers have discovered that when all members of a family live in a home environment that is characterized by open communication, understanding, and concern (that is, when the family is functional), the above mentioned family-related precursors of substance abuse can be reduced and early behavioral problems can be addressed and changed in a positive manner.

If you are addicted to alcohol, part of your treatment may include regular attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meetings. The AA recovery program is based on a spiritual framework that, along with support from other alcoholics, has helped millions of people attain sobriety.

Substance Abuse Prevention and Intervention

Interestingly, most of the substance abuse prevention and intervention research has been conducted on children who were between the ages of 10 and 17.  Current research, however, shows evidence that children at risk can be identified as early as preschool for preventative interventions.

Historically, substance abuse intervention and prevention programs centered on working with problem youths instead of with the entire family.  Such programs were based on rehabilitation and therapy approaches that focused on the youth who had the problem rather than the family.  One of reasons for this perspective was practicality.  That is, not only are children typically more accessible than entire families, but they are also easier to work with than the entire family from an intervention or prevention perspective. 

The following represents some of the classic alcoholic behaviors in the first stage of alcoholism: people drink to escape from stress and problems rather than for social reasons; increasing tolerance; gross drinking behavior, that is more frequent drinking of greater amounts of alcohol; boasting and a "big shot" complex; a lack of recognition by the person that he or she is in the early stages of a progressive illness; an ability to drink great amounts of alcohol without any apparent impairment; and a conscious effort to seek out more drinking opportunities.

More recent substance abuse prevention and intervention programs, however, have been family-based rather than problem-person oriented.  Stated differently, many current researchers have found that their problem focus has become the family (which many times is dysfunctional) rather than simply the child identified with the substance abuse problem.   In fact, relatively recent substance abuse research demonstrates that effective family intervention needs to address the social skills, peer associations, and antisocial behavior of the troubled youth AND the parents' drug use and the parents' child monitoring skills and behavior.

When experiencing alcohol withdrawal symptoms, ALWAYS see your doctor or your healthcare provider immediately so that he or she can assess the severity of your situation and suggest the best
option for treatment.

The following represents additional reasons why child-focused therapeutic approaches, rather than family-based interventions, demonstrate a less favorable outcome:

  • parents may be contributing to the vulnerability of their children
  • the family may not be supportive of the child's treatment goals
  • the family may be unaware of their impact on the child
  • the family may engage in subtle forms of therapeutic sabotage in an attempt to regain the former family balance
  • In a dysfunctional family, treating only the "problem child" is usually a fruitless endeavor  
In addition to alcohol-related pancreatitis, heart disease, cancer, and liver disease, excessive drinking over time is also associated with the following health conditions: infertility, irritated stomach lining and bleeding from stomach ulcers, obesity, nerve damage, vitamin deficiency, skin problems, muscle disease, sexual problems, epilepsy, and loss
of brain cells.

Family-Oriented Substance Abuse Interventions

A number of family-oriented interventions have been used to help prevent substance abuse.  These interventions include the following:

  • family therapy
  • in-home family crisis services
  • family education programs
  • family skills training programs
  • family services
  • family preservation programs

Family intervention programs differ in quality.  Taken as a collective, however, an evaluation of family-based interventions shows the effectiveness and viability of such approaches.

Every year in the United States, more than 40,000 babies are born with some degree of alcohol-related impairment. Although many, if not most, women understand that excessive drinking during pregnancy can lead to birth defects, many woman, apparently, are unaware or do not comprehend that moderate or even light drinking can seriously impair or harm the unborn fetus.

Concerning the above listed family-oriented intervention approaches, perhaps the "family skills training" is the most promising with high-risk, dysfunctional families.  With this form of intervention, all members of the family, including the "problem child," engage in structured activities designed by the therapist to change negative and damaging interaction patterns.  This kind of structured approach requires close therapeutic monitoring all through the training process.  Some of the kinds of training that can be employed in this form of intervention include the following:

  • communication skills
  • child management principles and parenting styles
  • parent-child interactions
  • affective skills
  • family management skills
  • effective monitoring skills

Dysfunctional Families Prevention and Intervention:  Conclusion

A dysfunctional family is a family in which abuse, misbehavior, and conflict, by various family members takes place on a continuing basis, influencing other family members to reinforce, enable, and perpetuate such behaviors.  What about dysfunctional families: prevention and intervention?  According to drug and alcohol abuse researchers, multi-problem, dysfunctional families with long-term problems are not likely to benefit from single-shot therapeutic or from short-term treatment methodologies.

  

Stated differently, dysfunctional families prevention and intervention require closely managed, coordinated, and monitored long-term therapy, including continual support and occasional booster sessions.  In a word, it is the well-managed, intensive, comprehensive, and the closely-monitored family-oriented treatment programs that are likely to be the most effective and productive in helping high-risk and dysfunctional families raise children who abstain from alcoholism or from drug or alcohol abuse.

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As serious as alcohol addiction is, it can be treated. Alcoholism treatment programs frequently use a combination of counseling and medications to help an individual stop drinking. Even though most alcoholics need help to recover from their disease, research has shown that with support and treatment, many individuals are able to stop drinking and restore their lives.

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