Families living with parental mental and/or substance use disorders face considerable biopsychosocial challenges, with complex pathways to mitigating risk, enhancing resilience, and supporting recovery. An ecological, life-span approach to improving outcomes for all family members – children, adolescents and adult themselves who are parents – requires careful consideration of sociocultural conditions, life stage and developmental age, and family-centered needs, goals, and plans. In addition, the community context, policy developments, and practice innovation play roles in contributing to the wellbeing and functioning of family members. The risk conveyed to all family members by parental mental and/or substance use disorders is great. Fortunately, the opportunities to intervene are plentiful and varied. However, in many cases, interventions are unspecified, untested and not brought to scale in regional, state or national initiatives. We may have the requisite knowledge to inform policy and practice, but this evidence may not be applied to effect innovation or change, suggesting the need for wide-spread knowledge translation and dissemination efforts, with significant potential to improve public mental health.
Our goal is to bring attention to and address gaps in the research literature. Some aspects of the identification, treatment and prevention of disorders for family members have been well-articulated in some countries. The issues of children and adolescents whose parents live with mental and/or substance use disorders have been the focus of international efforts to explore their experiences, bring attention to gaps in services and, to some extent, develop practice guidelines and test interventions. The area of perinatal maternal mental health has received a great deal of attention, though research and treatment strategies have not necessarily been patient-centered (i.e., informed by input from stakeholders, including mothers themselves). More recently, efforts have been made to explore the impact of children and adolescents (i.e., family experiences) on adults who are parents, and the ways in which success or failure as a parent may contribute to or undermine a parent’s treatment and recovery.
In this Research Topic, we aim to curate the latest knowledge in (a) intervention development, implementation and testing for all family members (i.e., children, adolescents and adults themselves) living with or who are parents experiencing mental and/or substance use disorders; (b) policy issues relevant to these families, along with testable and tested change strategies; and (c) innovative knowledge translation and dissemination approaches to improving outcomes for vulnerable family members of all ages. We hope to include articles on novel, technology-based solutions with strong conceptual underpinnings, appropriate to rigorous scientific testing. We are looking for contributions at all levels of analysis (e.g., policy and practice, community and individual), suggesting that submissions will reflect the creative, rigorous use of multiple and mixed methods. Our intention is to lay the groundwork for future innovation, to contribute to building the evidence base of effective interventions for family members who are living with or who are parents with mental and/or substance use disorders.
Families living with parental mental and/or substance use disorders face considerable biopsychosocial challenges, with complex pathways to mitigating risk, enhancing resilience, and supporting recovery. An ecological, life-span approach to improving outcomes for all family members – children, adolescents and adult themselves who are parents – requires careful consideration of sociocultural conditions, life stage and developmental age, and family-centered needs, goals, and plans. In addition, the community context, policy developments, and practice innovation play roles in contributing to the wellbeing and functioning of family members. The risk conveyed to all family members by parental mental and/or substance use disorders is great. Fortunately, the opportunities to intervene are plentiful and varied. However, in many cases, interventions are unspecified, untested and not brought to scale in regional, state or national initiatives. We may have the requisite knowledge to inform policy and practice, but this evidence may not be applied to effect innovation or change, suggesting the need for wide-spread knowledge translation and dissemination efforts, with significant potential to improve public mental health.
Our goal is to bring attention to and address gaps in the research literature. Some aspects of the identification, treatment and prevention of disorders for family members have been well-articulated in some countries. The issues of children and adolescents whose parents live with mental and/or substance use disorders have been the focus of international efforts to explore their experiences, bring attention to gaps in services and, to some extent, develop practice guidelines and test interventions. The area of perinatal maternal mental health has received a great deal of attention, though research and treatment strategies have not necessarily been patient-centered (i.e., informed by input from stakeholders, including mothers themselves). More recently, efforts have been made to explore the impact of children and adolescents (i.e., family experiences) on adults who are parents, and the ways in which success or failure as a parent may contribute to or undermine a parent’s treatment and recovery.
In this Research Topic, we aim to curate the latest knowledge in (a) intervention development, implementation and testing for all family members (i.e., children, adolescents and adults themselves) living with or who are parents experiencing mental and/or substance use disorders; (b) policy issues relevant to these families, along with testable and tested change strategies; and (c) innovative knowledge translation and dissemination approaches to improving outcomes for vulnerable family members of all ages. We hope to include articles on novel, technology-based solutions with strong conceptual underpinnings, appropriate to rigorous scientific testing. We are looking for contributions at all levels of analysis (e.g., policy and practice, community and individual), suggesting that submissions will reflect the creative, rigorous use of multiple and mixed methods. Our intention is to lay the groundwork for future innovation, to contribute to building the evidence base of effective interventions for family members who are living with or who are parents with mental and/or substance use disorders.