Mothering and substance use are believed to be incompatible according to conventional perspectives. The 4% of mothers of children under the age of 18 who have abused or become dependent upon illicit drugs or alcohol are the target of punitive social policies and interventions. Yet, these women do not stop being mothers while using substances, and they reject the media-portrayed images of bad and neglectful mothers they are assigned. Reaffirming Motherhood is a qualitative research study with women in substance abuse recovery programs. It documents how substance-using mothers think about, interact with, and care for, and plan for their children while using substances, seeking treatment, and undergoing recovery. Mothering occurs in diver...
There are now in Britain some 200,00 homes with a drug-using parent, and this figure does not includ...
To understand the culture of rural African-American women who use cocaine, ethnographic research was...
Abstract Introduction Consumption of substances is a ...
The qualitative study was an exploration of the experiences of racially and culturally diverse young...
In this paper we examined discourses of mothers who use substances. Focus groups were conducted at t...
Children born to substance-dependent mothers who themselves have had an upbringing disturbed by pare...
This article describes findings from a qualitative study that investigated the lived experiences of ...
Mothers are subject to intense cultural and social expectations about their role. For some, attempti...
Background: When a family encounters the problem of adolescent substance misuse, the burden of manag...
The purpose of this grounded theory (Strauss & Corbin, 1998) study was to explore the experiences of...
The widespread use of drugs includes women who are mothers and of childbearing age. A review of the ...
This ethnographic study considers the accounts of 12 new mothers in recovery for heroin addiction. U...
There is a strong correlation between parental substance abuse and child maltreatment, and many subs...
Using a sample of 118 drug-involved women originally released from prison in the 1990s and re-interv...
This qualitative study sought to learn from a group of impoverished, pregnant or parenting, single w...
There are now in Britain some 200,00 homes with a drug-using parent, and this figure does not includ...
To understand the culture of rural African-American women who use cocaine, ethnographic research was...
Abstract Introduction Consumption of substances is a ...
The qualitative study was an exploration of the experiences of racially and culturally diverse young...
In this paper we examined discourses of mothers who use substances. Focus groups were conducted at t...
Children born to substance-dependent mothers who themselves have had an upbringing disturbed by pare...
This article describes findings from a qualitative study that investigated the lived experiences of ...
Mothers are subject to intense cultural and social expectations about their role. For some, attempti...
Background: When a family encounters the problem of adolescent substance misuse, the burden of manag...
The purpose of this grounded theory (Strauss & Corbin, 1998) study was to explore the experiences of...
The widespread use of drugs includes women who are mothers and of childbearing age. A review of the ...
This ethnographic study considers the accounts of 12 new mothers in recovery for heroin addiction. U...
There is a strong correlation between parental substance abuse and child maltreatment, and many subs...
Using a sample of 118 drug-involved women originally released from prison in the 1990s and re-interv...
This qualitative study sought to learn from a group of impoverished, pregnant or parenting, single w...
There are now in Britain some 200,00 homes with a drug-using parent, and this figure does not includ...
To understand the culture of rural African-American women who use cocaine, ethnographic research was...
Abstract Introduction Consumption of substances is a ...