Trauma-informed, mindfulness-based intervention significantly improves parenting among mothers in opioid use disorder treatment
Thomas Jefferson University News Aug 02, 2017
Researchers at JeffersonÂs Maternal Addiction Treatment Education & Research (MATER) program found significant improvement in the quality of parenting among mothers who participated in a trauma–informed, mindfulness–based parenting intervention while also in medication–assisted treatment for opioid use disorder.
Results of the study, the first to scientifically test a mindfulness–based parenting intervention with this population, were published July 27 in the Journal of Addiction Medicine.
ÂOur results validate a powerful intervention when it is needed most, said senior author Diane Abatemarco, PhD, MSW, principal investigator, Director of MATER and Associate Professor of OB/GYN and Pediatrics in the Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University. ÂBy improving parenting through mindfulness, we may be able to change the intergenerational trajectory of trauma and improve childrenÂs and families lives.Â
A total of 160 women participated in a 12–week mindful parenting intervention at JeffersonÂs Family Center, an outpatient and intensive outpatient treatment center that cares for women who are pregnant, parenting or working toward reuniting with their child. The mindfulness–based program included mother/baby education and practice, education on the impact of trauma, and mindfulness meditation. Themes included non–judgment, full attention and compassion.
ÂWe designed the mindfulness–based parenting program to give women the resources and tools to be great parents. Our program supports moms, building their self–efficacy and self–confidence, said Abatemarco.
The research team conducted pre– and post–tests with the women using three validated instruments to measure observed parenting quality, the motherÂs childhood trauma exposure and self–reported mindful parenting. Women who participated in the mindfulness–based parenting program experienced a clinically significant increase in parenting quality, from Âlow at baseline to Âmoderate at completion.
ÂWe also found that attendance matters, said Meghan Gannon, PhD, MSPH, first author and research project manager at MATER. ÂFor women who experienced high levels of childhood trauma, attendance was key to improving parenting.Â
Study limitations include self–report bias, self–selection bias and outside factors such as the natural trajectory of recovery.
Go to Original
Results of the study, the first to scientifically test a mindfulness–based parenting intervention with this population, were published July 27 in the Journal of Addiction Medicine.
ÂOur results validate a powerful intervention when it is needed most, said senior author Diane Abatemarco, PhD, MSW, principal investigator, Director of MATER and Associate Professor of OB/GYN and Pediatrics in the Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University. ÂBy improving parenting through mindfulness, we may be able to change the intergenerational trajectory of trauma and improve childrenÂs and families lives.Â
A total of 160 women participated in a 12–week mindful parenting intervention at JeffersonÂs Family Center, an outpatient and intensive outpatient treatment center that cares for women who are pregnant, parenting or working toward reuniting with their child. The mindfulness–based program included mother/baby education and practice, education on the impact of trauma, and mindfulness meditation. Themes included non–judgment, full attention and compassion.
ÂWe designed the mindfulness–based parenting program to give women the resources and tools to be great parents. Our program supports moms, building their self–efficacy and self–confidence, said Abatemarco.
The research team conducted pre– and post–tests with the women using three validated instruments to measure observed parenting quality, the motherÂs childhood trauma exposure and self–reported mindful parenting. Women who participated in the mindfulness–based parenting program experienced a clinically significant increase in parenting quality, from Âlow at baseline to Âmoderate at completion.
ÂWe also found that attendance matters, said Meghan Gannon, PhD, MSPH, first author and research project manager at MATER. ÂFor women who experienced high levels of childhood trauma, attendance was key to improving parenting.Â
Study limitations include self–report bias, self–selection bias and outside factors such as the natural trajectory of recovery.
Only Doctors with an M3 India account can read this article. Sign up for free or login with your existing account.
4 reasons why Doctors love M3 India
-
Exclusive Write-ups & Webinars by KOLs
-
Daily Quiz by specialty
-
Paid Market Research Surveys
-
Case discussions, News & Journals' summaries