Substance ‐abusing pregnant women: prenatal intervention using ultrasound consultation and mentalization to enhance the mother–child relationship and reduce substance use

ABSTRACT Substance‐abusing pregnant and parenting women are considered one of the most challenging, but important, target groups for developing early parenting interventions. Some valuable efforts to develop such interventions have been made in the organizational sector in Finland. However, there is a great need for new ways of work that would simultaneously concentrate in substance‐abuse treatment and enhance parenting in public healthcare settings. The present article describes the background, content, and protocol of a new prenatal intervention developed for substance‐abusing pregnant women in a hospital setting in public healthcare. The intervention includes two new elements and pathways aimed to enhance the mothers’ curiosity toward her developing child and provide motivation to stay abstinent from substance use. The pathways are interactive ultrasound consultation and a new pregnancy diary, both using a parental mentalization focus. The intervention elements, experiences from running the intervention, evaluation protocol, and general characteristics of the study sample gained (n = 90) are described and discussed. Two case vignettes from the study sample are presented, and the applicability of this prenatal work with other groups and settings is considered. RESUMEN Las mujeres embarazadas y criando que abusan de sustancias es uno de los grupos de enfoques considerados de importancia y de mucho reto para desarrollar intervenciones tempranas de crianza. Se han rea...
Source: Infant Mental Health Journal - Category: Child Development Authors: Tags: ARTICLE Source Type: research