Pubdate: Sat, 05 Oct 2002 Source: Deseret News (UT) Copyright: 2002 Deseret News Publishing Corp. Contact: http://www.desnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/124 Author: James Thalman, Deseret News staff writer SUBSTANCE ABUSE LEADS TO CHILD, OTHER ABUSES OGDEN -- Drug abuse is not only strongly linked to child abuse, its effects get passed on and compounded with every generation if left unchecked, a national expert on substance abuse told a statewide audience of abuse treatment providers. Speaking to the 24th annual fall conference on substance abuse meeting in Ogden this week, Anna Marsh, deputy director for the U.S. Health and Human Services Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, said the cycle usually surfaces with alcohol and drug abuse factoring into 50 percent to 75 percent of child neglect and abuse cases. In cases of child sexual abuse, alcohol or some other drug is involved in more than 80 percent of the cases, Marsh said, adding that a study by the 3rd District Court in Utah last year showed that 60 percent of abuse cases involve drug abuse by a parent. But substance abuse has been rippling through a child's life long before child protection or police have intervened, Marsh said. Parents who abuse alcohol and other drugs discipline children less well as a rule, they don't attend to their children's emotional needs and overreact with harsh discipline that often turns into abuse, she said. The tragic pattern then gets passed down: Not only are substance-abusing parents poor role models, children who have been abused, particularly those who have been sexually abused, more often than not turn to abusing substances to help them deal with their past abuse. "Substance abuse ignites an intergenerational fire," Marsh said. "The abused often become the abusers and it repeats one generation to the next." National studies by Marsh's center show that 8.3 million children are living with a parent who is either dependent on alcohol or needs treatment for illicit drugs. That translates to 11 percent of children under age 15, or about three children per school classroom. When an abuse situation becomes so bad that children are taken into state custody, trauma for the child becomes acute, she said. But as traumatic as removing a child can be, "it's better for a child to see a parent in recovery than to be with the parent who is abusing," Marsh said. "That is the only way we can turn abuse into healing and an abusing family into a place for sustenance and growth." Abusing parents are a big contributor to the dramatic increase in the use of methamphetamine among teenage girls in Utah, said Michelle Wilcox, a drug treatment counselor with the state Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health. Most girls who are recovering from meth, "which seems to be becoming the drug of choice among girls," have been using with or witnessing a parent use it, Wilcox said. Meth, which works much like speed on the brain, is particularly difficult for young girls to give up because they use it either as part of a relationship with a parent or with a boyfriend. "In fact, when they talk about giving up the drug, they talk about their addiction as if it were a boyfriend," Wilcox said. "That's how closely linked the drug is to their relationships. Giving it up to many of these girls is like giving up someone they love, or think they do." The other complicating factor for girls is the message they get from the media that they must be thin, she said. Because meth increases metabolism, girls often start using it as a diet pill to look like fashion models on TV or in magazines. "Girls haven't learned yet not to believe those portrayals, and they think the thinner they are the prettier they are," Wilcox said. "The problem is once someone starts using regularly, their self-perception gets warped, and even though they are drastically underweight, their hair is brittle, their skin has sores and they have bags under their eyes, they think they look great." Signs of use that parents can watch for are dilated pupils, elevated respiration, uncontrollable movements and noticeable increases in activity. More use can induce anxiousness and nervousness, paranoia, mood swings and aggressive behavior. The drug can also lead to sudden death through heart attack and stroke. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom