Pubdate: Mon, 05 Dec 2005 Source: Herald-Sun, The (Durham, NC) Copyright: 2005 The Herald-Sun Contact: http://www.herald-sun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1428 Author: Jim Shamp, The Herald-Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) HELPING CRACK-USING MOMS TALK TO KIDS DURHAM -- Like parents in television commercials demanding to know where their teens are and who they're with, as many as 150 black crack-using mothers in Durham are learning how to open and maintain potentially lifesaving conversations with their preadolescent children. The three-year, federally funded program, developed by scientists at RTI International, is designed to measure its potential for keeping the children from using drugs and lowering their risk for developing HIV infection. If proven effective, it may become a national model for helping struggling families. "We're trying to build their relationships," said K.K. Lam, RTI's principal investigator for the study, which is being paid for by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. "Substance abuse and HIV infection rates within this population of mothers and youths in North Carolina is a significant concern." As drug users, most of the women involved in the program have several health issues that detract from their parenting -- and from the rest of their lives, Lam said. "A lot of people want to just write these women off and say we can't do anything with them until they kick their drug habit," she said. "Maybe that's the case in a few extreme circumstances, but many of these women are doing somewhat OK, and still have a lot of skills to offer." Mothers may be eligible for the program if they're living with their children and if they've used crack cocaine on about 13 of the past 180 days -- approximately once a week. "People in the community say that's about the point at which the drugs are affecting their lives," Lam said "They're said to be 'in a fog,' enough that their drug use would be affecting their parenting at some level." So far, according to Lam, 62 women have been enrolled in the program. And they're already saying it's helpful, according to the researcher. She said the children often served as the motivators for their mothers to attend the six weekly two-hour sessions and to complete the homework assignments. The latter generally include discussions between the mothers and their children about such sensitive topics as sex and drug use. Though addiction increasingly is understood as a chronic illness, with physiological components as real as hypertension or diabetes, as many as 87 percent of adult drug users who need treatment are not getting it. Researchers estimate that between 6 million and 12 million children are living with a parent with a substance abuse problem. Research suggests that more than half of children living with substance-abusing mothers have been suspended from school and three-fourths of that population have witnessed a drug deal. The family intervention program, held at the First United Antioch Baptist Church at 1415 Holloway St., recruits participants mainly through a unique "street outreach" system, Lam said. "We have workers who are trusted in the community, often some of whom are in recovery themselves," she said. Recruiters are paid a few dollars for each eligible participant they bring into the program. Other women are recruited through word-of-mouth peer advocate programs. Women responding to the invitation undergo an intake interview, then are randomized into an intervention group or a control, so Lam and her colleagues will be able to measure any differences made by the interventions. All participants ultimately are offered referrals to community providers that can help them with their addiction illnesses and other problems, Lam said. "We stay in contact with them if they need help," she said. During the first hour of the intervention session, the children and their mothers meet with counselors separately. In the second hour they have a family session and light meal together, practicing some of the skills they've learned. The sessions include locally relevant examples, stories, language and graphics, as well as HIV education and goal setting. At the end of the program, participants return for a one-month follow-up interview and a graduation observance, Lam said. "Our goal with the family intervention sessions is to empower these mothers and remind them that they still can have a lot of positive influence over their kids, despite their own drug use," Lam said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake