Highlights
- Behavioral couples treatment (BCT) attendance has indirect effects on child abuse risk via relationship satisfaction.
- Fewer days of substance use benefits fathers' child abuse risk.
- Relationship satisfaction, but not fewer days of substance use, impacts mothers' child abuse risk.
- BCT may have secondary benefits on child abuse risk.
Results
of piecewise latent growth models tested whether the number of BCT sessions attended
and number of days abstinent from drugs and alcohol influenced relationship
satisfaction and its growth over time, and in turn if relationship satisfaction
and change in relationship satisfaction influenced risk for child abuse.
For
both mothers and fathers, attending more BCT sessions lead to a direct increase
in relationship satisfaction, which in turn led to stronger reductions in risk
for child abuse. This effect was maintained from the post-intervention through
the 6-month post-intervention follow-up.
For fathers, number of days abstinent
significantly influenced reduction in child abuse potential at
post-intervention via relationship satisfaction. This indirect effect was not
present for mothers. The overall benefits of BCT on mothers' and fathers' risk
for child abuse suggest that BCT may have promise in reducing risk for child
abuse among couples in which one or both parents have SUD.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/iw23Rx
By: Michelle
L. Kelley, Ph.D., Adrian J. Bravo,
M.S., Abby L.
Braitman, Ph.D., Adrienne K. Lawless, Hannah R. Lawrence,
M.S.
Affiliations
Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA, United States
Correspondence
Corresponding author at: Department of Psychology, Old
Dominion University (https://www.odu.edu/psychology), Norfolk, VA 23529-0267. Tel.: +1 757 683 4459; fax: +1 757
683 5087.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv
insight
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