Abstract
This study examined the prospective associations among maternal substance use, depressive symptoms, and children's behavioral problems in a family systems therapy (ecologically based family therapy [EBFT]) condition and an individual treatment condition. Participants included 183 mothers with a substance use disorder who had at least 1 biological child in their care. Mothers were randomly assigned to the EBFT condition (n = 123) or an individual treatment condition (n = 60). Maternal substance use, depressive symptoms, and child behavioral problems were assessed at baseline and at 3, 6, and 12 months postbaseline. Autoregressive cross-lagged models were estimated to compare whether the cross-lagged paths among the 3 variables differed from zero in each treatment condition. Findings revealed that for individual treatment, strong reciprocal relationships were observed between maternal substance use and maternal depressive symptoms, and between maternal substance use and child behavioral problems. Conversely, in the EBFT group, fewer reciprocal relationships were observed, and instead, maternal depressive symptoms predicted more future child behavioral problems. These findings suggest an interruption in the dysfunctional reciprocal transmission of problem behaviors between mothers and children over time in the family therapy condition. The findings provide evidence for the effectiveness of family systems therapy, EBFT, in interrupting the dysfunctional family dynamics that contribute to maternal substance using behaviors and child behavioral problems. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
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