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Opioid dependence and intimate partner violence: associations with the current parenting behavior of fathers

Carla Smith Stover (Assistant Professor, based at Department of Mental Health Law and Policy MHC2735, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA)
Thomas J. McMahon (Associate Professor, based at West Haven Mental Health Clinic, Yale University School of Medicine, West Haven, Connecticut, USA)

Advances in Dual Diagnosis

ISSN: 1757-0972

Article publication date: 5 March 2014

196

Abstract

Purpose

Because the concurrent nature of chronic drug abuse (DA) and intimate partner violence (IPV) is frequently ignored in research examining the correlates of the two conditions, the purpose of this paper is designed to document differences in parenting behavior associated with a history of DA vs a history of IPV in fathers.

Design/methodology/approach

An ethnically diverse sample of 91 opioid-dependent fathers receiving methadone maintenance treatment and a demographically similar group of 111 fathers living in the same community with no history of alcohol or DA since the birth of their first child were interviewed using a set of standard research measures.

Findings

Multivariate analysis of covariance revealed that, after allowance for demographic covariates, a history of either minor or severe IPV, but not a history of DA, was associated with a report of more negative parenting behavior. A history of minor IPV was associated primarily with a lack of warmth and affection in parenting behavior. A history of severe IPV was associated with more aggressive and more neglectful parenting behavior.

Originality/value

Within a statistical model that allowed for the extent to which DA and IPV can co-occur during the family career of men, the results of this study suggested that IPV, more so than DA, was associated with parenting behavior representing risk for abuse and neglect of children. Clinical intervention with high-risk fathers need to be grounded in a better understanding of the potential influence of DA and IPV on the parenting behavior of men at risk for child abuse and neglect.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the US Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Drug abuse (R03 DA011988, R01 DA020619, and K23 DA023334). The authors would like to thank the clients and staff at The APT Foundation for their support of this project. They would also like to thank Justin Winkel, Lance Barnes, Andrew Dahur, and Francis Giannini for their assistance with the collection and management of the data presented here.

Citation

Smith Stover, C. and J. McMahon, T. (2014), "Opioid dependence and intimate partner violence: associations with the current parenting behavior of fathers", Advances in Dual Diagnosis, Vol. 7 No. 1, pp. 3-14. https://doi.org/10.1108/ADD-09-2013-0022

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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