Tackling the Opioid Crisis’ Impact on Children and their Mothers

Looking Forward to a BRIGHT Future

As organizations across the United States tackle the ongoing opioid crisis, a team of BU faculty have been working to address one of the epidemics’ most vulnerable populations — children and their mothers.

Ruths
L to R: Ruth Rose-Jacobs, ScD, and Ruth Paris, PhD, LICSW

BUSM’s Associate Professor of pediatrics Ruth Rose-Jacobs, ScD, co-PI, and BU’s School of Social Work Associate Professor and Chair of clinical practice Ruth Paris, PhD, LICSW, PI, together with and partners at the Institute for Health & Recovery (IHR), a statewide non-profit organization in Cambridge, Mass., received a $900,000, three-year grant from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). The grant will be used to measure the effectiveness of Project BRIGHT or “Building Resilience through Intervention: Growing Healthier Together,” a therapeutic parent-infant home-based intervention aimed at improving the mother-child relationship by increasing maternal sensitivity and parenting capacities.

Crisis in the Cradle
Mothers with opioid use disorders (OUDs) struggle and can be disengaged as parents, leading to possible child maltreatment and poor long-term outcomes — resulting in two generations suffering the negative consequences of OUDs.

The numbers behind the mother-child cohort are alarming. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA) reported in 2017 an annual average of 21,000 pregnant women misuse opioids per month, putting thousands of substance-exposed newborns (SEN) at risk for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS). In Massachusetts, the increase in SEN births is five times the national average.

 “Opioid-exposed newborns can be difficult to soothe and their parents often experience guilt, helplessness, and frustration. Simultaneously, the mothers can have difficulties regulating their own emotions often due to significant histories of trauma and long-standing mental health disorders. This can result in impatient and challenged parenting,” Dr. Paris explained. “Given this complexity in the early parent-child relationship, these children are three to four times more likely to suffer maltreatment and an attachment relationship that is severely strained.”

Seeing the Light
The team has developed a pragmatic community-based parenting intervention for women with OUDs and their children that addresses several aspects of this crisis: health disparities, the clinical priority of opioid abuse set by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, and the Maternal and Child Health Bureau’s goal of promoting environments that support maternal and child health.

They will conduct a pragmatic randomized controlled trial comparing BRIGHT, an evidence-informed parenting intervention offered from the third trimester of pregnancy until the infant is nine months old, to standard treatment, which consists of referrals to social services plus child development handouts. They aim to show improvement in parent-child relationships and parenting capacities while reducing child maltreatment and improving infant’s social-emotional development.

“By addressing the dangers of opioid misuse, maternal trauma, mental health symptoms, and focusing on the parent-child relationship, we hope to demonstrate that BRIGHT can help prevent child maltreatment by improving parenting,” Dr. Paris said. “Our ultimate goal is to translate these findings into practice and policy at the local, regional and national level.”