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Child Maltreatment, Vol. 12, No. 2, 137-149 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1077559507300322

Parental Substance Use Disorders and Child Maltreatment: Overlap, Gaps, and Opportunities

Nancy K. Young

Children and Family Futures, nkyoung{at}cffutures.org

Sharon M. Boles

Children and Family Futures

Cathleen Otero

Children and Family Futures

There are relatively few empirically sound studies or nationally representative data on the number of children in Child Welfare Services (CWS) who are affected by their parents' substance abuse or dependence. The two systems that could systematically monitor this population, CWS and substance abuse treatment, are not required to capture the data elements that would identify families in both systems. The studies that are based on CWS populations or parents in treatment indicate that there is a substantial overlap in client populations. This review provides a summary of the available data; provides estimates of the overlap between populations, including the number of infants born each year with prenatal substance exposure; and suggests important opportunities to close the data gap between the systems. The findings underscore both the need for obtaining accurate data within the systems and the opportunities for states to improve their cross-system data efforts as part of their outcome monitoring.

Key Words: prevalence • substance use disorders • child welfare


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S. J. Ondersma
Introduction to the Second Special Section on Substance Abuse and Child Maltreatment
Child Maltreat, May 1, 2007; 12(2): 111 - 113.
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