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Throwing the woman out with the bathwater? Towards a trauma-informed, gender responsive and empathic approach to women and drug use { Marguerite Woods Trauma Informed Care Conference, SAOL Project, 9.3.2016 To pose some pertinent questions about illicit drug use and trauma To explore a range of issues with regard to women, drug use, parenting and trauma To focus on adversity experienced by women To examine practice concerns Aims of this presentation or trauma What are the connections between drug use and trauma? What do we know about these links? Why the relative silence and discomfort about this issue in addiction and child welfare services? How should we respond? Key Questions Harm Reduction & Recovery Stigma, labelling, diagnoses, ‘disorders’ Obstacles to empathy? The search for single conceptual models as answers, quick fixes and solutions Beyond drug use Re-conceptualisation Feminism – ‘Waking the Feminists’ – a gender sensitive response Challenging & changing concepts The Mad, Bad, Sad scenarios Victims Villains Damaged Structure/Agency debate – women lured into use by “doctors, dealers and darlings” (Ettorre, 1992) Images of women drug users I think that women get a harder time. I think once they come to the attention of services, we have ideas as to how women ought to behave in our society and if they slip from that, from being like the Virgin Mary, they’re gone! They’re like the Mary Magdalenes aren’t they? [Social Worker] (Woods, 2008) Some ‘potentially perverse responses’ to women drug users Punitive Responses Criminalisation of drug use during pregnancy Enforced contraception, abortion, sterilisation or on occasion the denial of these Preconceived ideas (before full assessment of capacity to parent) that drug use and parenting are incompatible Loss of custody – removal of children at birth Limitations in terms of access and visiting to children in alternative, even kinship care Many studies of women and drug use have demonstrated that significant numbers of women have experienced adversity in childhood childhood sexual abuse maltreatment or abuse emotional and psychological abuse neglect witnessing violence between parents domestic or intimate partner violence rape, sexual assault exposure to community and ambient violence early bereavement, grief and loss stigma poverty and deprivation (Woods, 2008; Reed & Mazelis, 2005; Millar & Stermac, 2000; Sterk, 1999; Maher, 1995; Taylor, 1993; Rosenbaum, 1981). Adversity as trauma Such adverse experiences have been defined as traumatic (Chung, 2009; Covington, 2008, 2007; Miller, 2002; Najavits et al., 1997). Definitions of trauma vary and have changed significantly over time. An effect of trauma may be Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), but not necessarily. Significant numbers of people who use drugs or alcohol problematically have experienced trauma at some point in their lives, ranging from 55% to 99% (Navajits et al, 1997). Those with a history of traumatic experiences are likely to have experienced a number of traumatic events and in addition those with drug/ alcohol and mental health issues experience more frequent exposure to violence, violent relationships and abusive environments and contexts (Harris, 1996). Involvement in drug and alcohol use, homelessness, prostitution and imprisonment may increase vulnerability and the likelihood of exposure to violence generally (Torchalla et al, 2012;). While 92% of the men and 91% of the women participants in one US study reported experiences of lifetime trauma, women were twice as likely to experience re-exposure and overall injecting drug users experienced re-exposure to trauma at least once monthly. The authors associated urban living and poverty with exacerbating the possibility of such experiences of re-exposure (Pierce, Kolodner, Brooner & Kidorf, 2011). ‘Keeping Mum’: A qualitative study of women drug users’ experience of preserving motherhood Semi-structured interviews with forty professional workers in the drug treatment, nursing, medical, community work and social work fields A series of in-depth interviews with twenty-six women drug users 14 focus groups Participant observation In total contacts, interviews and focus groups with 205 women drug users at various stages of their drug-using and motherhood careers; 100 professional workers and a number of family members and several adult children of the women participants Varying accounts of childhood years – ranging from ‘happy childhoods’ (ten women) or ‘fine’, ‘OK’ (five women) to ‘difficult’, or ‘painful’ (eleven women) ‘My childhood was traumatic, I’d have to say, traumatic’ [Katherine] Adversity or Trauma? – ‘Unspoken Histories’ The professional workers interviewed believed that many women drug users had endured unhappy childhoods with much adversity, describing their experiences of violence, severe punishments, physical beatings, physical abuse, sexual abuse, rape and neglect. In addition to professional workers ’ accounts, 16 women interviewed described experiences of abuse during childhood. Exposure to violence during childhood Very few have actually identified a happy childhood, and when I say that, it may not be issues like just separation or whatever, it is actually abuse a lot of the time that they have experienced. (Refuge Worker) For me, the root of drug abuse, a lot of it was rooted in sexual abuse or serious bereavement or trauma as children, you know, separation from parents and sexual abuse… (Social Worker) Exposure to violence during childhood Of the twenty-six women interviewed, thirteen women referred to their experiences of sexual abuse during childhood/teenage years. Thirteen women experienced physical abuse. Four women experienced violence at the hands of their mothers only, while five women experienced violence from their fathers only. Four women reported experiencing violence at the hands of both their mother and father. Eight mothers and 10 fathers were described as having been violent. Fifteen women reported experiences of emotional abuse and some specifically mentioned forms of neglect. Eleven women experienced all three types of abuse sexual abuse, physical violence and emotional abuse. Fourteen of the 26 women interviewed witnessed or experienced violence between their parents in the home of the family of origin. Some specifically mentioned the strain and pain of seeing parents experience violence. Some witnessed their mothers experience of violence while others spoke of their fathers’ experience of abuse at the hand of their mothers. Me Da used to beat me Ma, you know, things like that. Now I mean, like Jesus, bangs of hatchets into the head and things like that. [Helen] The unemployment for generations, the drink, the violence and the hard work of making ends meet, day in, day out, week in week out. Getting food on the table, clothes on our back, shoes on our feet - our Ma’s had to deal with that. [Amy] Exposure to violence during childhood Almost all of the women who witnessed violence in their families of origin experienced violence at the hands of partners later in adolescence or adulthood. In total, 17 women interviewed experienced physical violence in one or more relationships. Definitions of violence and abusive behaviour varied. Many evidently violent incidents were not defined or ‘experienced’ as violence. Low thresholds - lives impacted upon by verbal and physical aggression. Most women were reluctant to leave their violent partners for a variety of reasons, including not wishing to rupture the relationship between their children and their father. When women left violent relationships, they described doing so as being‘for the kids’ Ambient violence is widespread. Experiences of domestic violence in adulthood I was abused. Mentally, emotionally, physically, sexually …I have vague memories around some incidents. I remember a lot from my childhood. … There was so much fuckin’ secrecy. Nobody talked about anything and probably lack of protection to, yeah obviously. [Katherine] Childhood victimisation, however, was hardly ever offered by the women as a reason for teenage and adult drug use. I don’t think I met a woman drug user who was an injector who hadn’t been abused or raped somewhere in their career. [Addiction Counsellor] Other experiences Adulthood of Violence in A majority of one hundred professional workers encountered suggested causal relationships between women drug users’ early childhood experiences of adversity, neglect and trauma and later drug use. They also suggested that women’s early experiences of having been parented impacted on their later involvement in parenting and their parenting styles. Impacts in adulthood The word ‘trauma’ was used sparingly and cautiously throughout the study It appeared rarely in the transcripts of 100 interviews, 14 focus groups and the field notes from extensive fieldwork Reflection Childhood experiences, the impact of neglect and abuse experiences particularly, and their impact on individuals in adulthood has been regarded as ‘taboo for discussion’ (Klein et al., 2007: 40) Viewing drug use as self-medication or a coping strategy is controversial - a speculative causal connection between adverse childhood experiences and adult drug use. Reservations about the focus During fieldwork many women described their experiences of interruption to the role of mother. 15 of the 26 women interviewees 28 of the 44 focus group participants a loosely estimated 75 of the 123 mothers encountered during observation and fieldwork Some had lost all contact with their children. Three women interviewees and several focus group members and street contacts retrieved the role, while several others partially recovered their role. Motherhood Interrupted Few people in the women’s social networks or professional workers, however, regarded this experience of interrupted motherhood as a loss, bereavement, or trauma, merely viewing it as a consequence of the women’s behaviour, as reported by women and workers. Loss of child custody – Motherhood Interrupted or Terminated Several recent Canadian studies also describe women drug users’ experiences of mothering and their interaction with child welfare services, highlighting ‘traumatic grief’. The trauma experience is named explicitly, identified as central to women’s experience of separation from their children, and exacerbated by women’s lifetime histories of trauma. These suggest the need for Child Protection workers’ understanding of and sensitivity towards these loss and grief experiences. (Kenny, Barrington & Green, 2015; Nixon, Radke & Tutty, 2013) Loss of child custody Do attitudes, demeanour, practice, and drug treatment and child protection systems in fact inadvertently traumatise or retraumatise the women in contact with the services? While child protection or welfare systems are often trauma informed and aware with regards to children’s experiences, the lifetime trauma exposure of parents is rarely acknowledged. It is suggested that the experiences of interactions with social work services ‘can themselves be origins and configuring forces of trauma with far reaching implications for mothers and family ties’ and the loss of children as ‘an overlooked source of institutionally orchestrated trauma’ is highlighted (Kenny et al., 2015, p. 1163). Punitive perspectives Confrontational approaches Supervised urine testing Lack of empathy Boundaries Safety, warmth, care An understanding of and sensitivity towards child custody losses as grief experiences An understanding of social context Drug Treatment – tough love? Grella, C. (2008) From Generic to Gender-Responsive Treatment. Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, p. 337 Recognising the impact of violence and victimisation Recovery from trauma as a primary goal Empowerment model Maximising women’s choices and controls over recovery Based in a relational collaboration Respectful of the need for safety, respect and acceptance Emphasise strengths, highlighting adaptations over symptoms and resilience over pathology Minimise the possibilities of retraumatisation Cultural competence and understanding of each woman in the context of her life experience and cultural background Consumer involvement in design and evaluation of services Principles of trauma-informed care (Eliott, Bjelajac, Fallot, Markoff, & Reed, 2005, pp. 464-469) Adversity - Hope Benefits of adversity? Post-traumatic Growth? Strengths and coping Resilience Safety ‘Recovery’ Healing Reducing Harm Trauma proofing Need for research and an explicit focus on the trauma experiences of drug-using women and their children Caution with regard to labelling and ‘disordering’ Need for explicit links between trauma and drug and alcohol use to be made in professional training Workers responding to trauma and other mental health issues need to be comfortable with and knowledgeable about drug and alcohol issues Workers need also to be aware of their own personal traumatic experiences and the possibility of secondary or vicarious traumatisation in the professional arena Attitudes of workers generally towards drug-using women must be challenged Conclusions A trauma-informed, gender responsive and empathic response (Covington, 2008; 2007; Grella, 2008; Elliot et al, 2005) Integrated, integrative and pluralistic responses tailor made to women’s preferences To challenge the quest for single conceptual models of understanding, response or intervention in the addiction field generally and in response to trauma issues A trauma-informed drug treatment system A trauma-informed child welfare system, that not only takes account of the trauma experiences of children in families where drug/alcohol use are issues but also takes account of women’s retrospective and current traumatisation and retraumatisation experiences. A ‘trauma lens’ may allow for the integration of understanding, practice and response. The Future? ‘Recognition that problematic drug use is a response to trauma, abuse, poverty, social disenfranchisement and psychiatric distress should also be useful in countering the cruel banalities of those who condem both drugs and the marginalised. In using that tool, however, we need to be aware of unintended effects.’ (valentine & Fraser, 2008, p. 415) A caveat – the next big thing in the addiction field?