Reducing Parental Substance Use and Enhancing Family Resilience Among Rural Families Through Ohio START
Purpose
The goal of this observational study is to learn about the roles played by parental activity spaces and social networks in reducing parental substance use and promoting child and family health outcomes in the context of Ohio START (Sobriety, Treatment, and Reducing Trauma) for families in rural areas. This study will investigate if substance use treatment service referrals and family peer mentoring services provided by Ohio START lead to positive changes in parental activity spaces and social networks, and if these positive changes lead to better child and family outcomes. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Does having behavioral health services (referred by Ohio START workers) close to where parents spend their time help with substance use recovery and child health? - Does peer mentor support through Ohio START help parents build stronger social connections and family resilience, and does this lead to better long-term family health? - Do these associations differ in rural areas compared to urban areas? Participants will: - Answer survey questions about their substance use, parenting, child health, and family well-being across three waves (Wave 1: when they enroll in the study, Wave 2: 6-month follow-up, and Wave 3: 12-month follow-up) - Share information about places they go regularly (such as work, stores, and healthcare visits) - Share information about people in their support network
Conditions
- Substance Use Disorder (SUD)
- Rural Health
- Family Resilience
- Child Maltreatment
- Child Well-beiing
- Substance Use Recovery
Eligibility
- Eligible Ages
- Over 18 Years
- Eligible Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- age 18 or older;
- currently enrolled in Ohio START;
- are unemployed or have family income at or below the federal poverty level,
- designated as the primary parent in the Ohio START case plan.
Study Design
- Phase
- Study Type
- Observational
- Observational Model
- Cohort
- Time Perspective
- Prospective
Arm Groups
| Arm | Description | Assigned Intervention |
|---|---|---|
| Rural parents receiving Ohio START services | Parents who have entered the child welfare system due to co-occurring parental substance use and child maltreatment and who are currently enrolled in Ohio START (Ohio Sobriety, Treatment, and Reducing Trauma). The study is conducted in the context of Ohio START, a children-services-led initiative and evidence-informed intervention model currently operating in 57 counties in the state of Ohio. If both parents from the same family receive the Ohio START intervention, both are eligible to participate. |
|
Recruiting Locations
Columbus, Ohio 43210
More Details
- Status
- Recruiting
- Sponsor
- Ohio State University
Detailed Description
Co-occurring parental substance use disorder (SUD) and child maltreatment are key risk factors associated with poor health outcomes among children and families in rural areas. Importantly, rural communities face geographic, economic, and social challenges that limit their access to SUD treatment services. Ohio Sobriety, Treatment, and Reducing Trauma (Ohio START) is a family-centered child welfare service delivery intervention that builds on cross-system collaboration with behavioral health service organizations to provide timely access to SUD treatment services for parents involved with the child welfare system. Ohio START also supports parents' journey to SUD recovery through family peer mentors -individuals with lived experience in SUD recovery and previous child welfare involvement- who offer intensive recovery support. When Ohio START child welfare caseworkers refer parents to SUD treatment services located within or near the places parents regularly visit (i.e., activity spaces), parents may be more likely to engage in treatment consistently and experience improvements in their health and family well-being. Similarly, when parents actively engage with family peer mentors, who help them connect with treatment and recovery communities, they may experience positive shifts in their activity spaces and social networks. Yet, it remains unclear how access to SUD treatment services within parents' activity spaces and greater engagement with family peer mentors influence child and family health outcomes, especially among low-income families in rural areas. These are important questions that, if answered, could enhance interventions to better serve families in rural communities. Capitalizing on a unique opportunity to leverage the ongoing Ohio START initiative and access child welfare-involved families in rural areas, we seek to collect novel, longitudinal activity space and social networks data from 400 families engaging in Ohio START. The study has three specific aims: (1) to determine whether the overlap between parental activity spaces and child welfare workers' referral networks (i.e., proximity and availability of SUD treatment providers) predicts intermediate (i.e., SUD treatment service use, family resilience) and long-term (i.e., parent substance use, child psychosocial-behavioral health, child maltreatment) family health outcomes; (2) to examine how parents' engagement with family peer mentors is associated with changes in the attributes of parental activity spaces and social networks over time and how these changes, in turn, are associated with family health outcomes; (3) to test whether rurality moderates the effects of SUD treatment referral networks, activity spaces, and social networks on family health outcomes. The proposed project will produce valuable knowledge that can be used to modify START and other family-level intervention efforts to mitigate risks and maximize protection in parents' activity spaces and social networks to enhance family resilience, prevent child maltreatment, and promote child well-being in rural communities.