Prevention and Intervention Strategies With Children of Alcoholics.
- Författare
- Emshoff JG, Price AW.
- Titel
- Prevention and Intervention Strategies With Children of Alcoholics.
- Utgivningsår
- 1999
- Tidskrift
- Pediatrics
- Volym
- 103
- Häfte
- 5
- Sidor
- 1112
- Sammanfattning
Objective. This article was designed to give pediatricians a basic knowledge of the needs of children who live in families with alcoholism. It briefly presents issues involved in the identification and screening of such individuals and provides primary attention to a variety of preventive and treatment strategies that have been used with school children of alcoholics (COAs), along with evidence of their effectiveness.
Methodology. A literature search including both published and unpublished descriptions and evaluations of interventions with COAs.
Results. The scope and nature of the problems of growing up in an alcoholic home are presented. The risk and protective factors associated with this population have been used as a foundation for preventive and treatment interventions. The most common modality of prevention and intervention programs is the short-term small group format. Programs for COAs should include the basic components of information, problem- and emotion-focused coping skills, and social and emotional support. Physicians are in a unique position to identify and provide basic services and referrals for COAs. School settings are the most common intervention sites, but family and broad-based community programs also have shown promise in alcohol and other drug prevention.
Conclusions. Several COA interventions have demonstrated positive results with respect to a variety of measures including knowledge of program content, social support, coping skills, and emotional functioning. Rigorous studies are needed to understand better the complex ways children deal with parental alcoholism. A need remains for empirically sound evaluations and for the delineation of research findings.