doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200006052

Article type: Original Research

PUBLISHED 1 January 2004

Volume 29 Issue 3

Drug use by parents: The challenge for child protection and drug and alcohol services

Frank Ainsworth

name here
Frank Ainsworth1 ORCID logo

Affiliations

1 Edith Cowan University, School of International Cultural and Community Studies, Joondalup Campus, Perth WA 6027, frankainsworth@hotmail.com

Contributions

Frank Ainsworth -

CITATION: Ainsworth F. (2004). Drug use by parents: The challenge for child protection and drug and alcohol services. Children Australia, 29(3), 1495. doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200006052

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Abstract

This article focuses on parental drug use and the impact on child welfare. The gravity of this issue is well documented in a number of reports from government and in annual reports from relevant state and territory departments. Yet, there has been little attention to this issue in Australian journals in spite of the fact that this is probably the most critical issue child protection services have had to face for two decades or more. Parental drug use is almost certainly responsible for the rise in the number of children, especially young children, entering out-of-home care. Drug use also creates issues in relation to family reunification. The final part of the article proposes an enhanced three stage model of family reunification that addresses these issues. This model is based on greater collaboration between child protection services, drug treatment agencies, and the legal system.

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