While recent research has
stressed the supportive role that family and friends play for incarcerated
persons as they re-enter the community, drug-using incarcerated women
re-entering the community often have to rely on family, community, and intimate
relationships that have played a role in their substance abuse and
criminalization.
This study conducted qualitative analysis of clinical sessions
with rural, drug-using women (N = 20) in a larger prison-based HIV
risk reduction intervention in Kentucky during 2012-2014 to examine
incarcerated women’s perceptions of the role of their family, community, and
intimate relationships in their plans to decrease their substance abuse upon
community re-entry.
Women stressed the obstacles to receiving support in many
of their family and drug-using relationships after community re-entry.
Nonetheless, they asserted that changes in their relationships could support
their desires to end their substance abuse by setting limits on and using their
positive relationships, particularly with their children, to motivate them to
change. Interventions to promote incarcerated women’s health behavior
changes—including substance abuse—must acknowledge the complex social
environments in which they live.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/oUaDP7
By: Claire Snell-Rood PhDa*, Michele Staton-Tindall PhD, MSWb &Grant Victor MSWb
- a University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Department of Behavioral Science, 108 Medical Behavioral Science Building, Lexington, KY 40536-0086
- b University of Kentucky College of Social Work, 619 Patterson Office Tower, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506-0027
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