# Review of Studies Regarding Assessment of Families Where Children Are at Risk of Harm Due to Parental Substance Misuse

**Authors:** Richard D. Tustin

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijerph22040612 · 2025-04-14

## TL;DR

This paper reviews how parental substance misuse affects children and highlights the need for better policies and interventions to protect vulnerable families.

## Contribution

The paper provides a rapid review linking parental substance misuse, family violence, and parenting capacity, emphasizing gaps in policy and practice.

## Key findings

- Parental substance misuse is associated with reduced parenting capacity and increased family violence.
- Cumulative risk of harm to children is supported by research but not reflected in current policies.
- Parents with substance misuse often have multiple complex needs requiring early intervention therapies.

## Abstract

Questions arise about links between the use of substances and violence, especially when parents misuse substances and there is potential to expose children to family violence. Background. The review has four aims: identify research into the harmful impacts of parental substance use on children; identify policies in Australia about the risks from parental substance misuse; identify interventions to manage unsafe parental substance use; and review practices involving confidentiality and collaboration when a parent has multiple complex needs. Method. The paper provides a rapid review of the literature, linking parental substance misuse, family violence, and parenting capacity and covering both policies and empirical evidence. Results. The main finding is that parental substance misuse does affect parenting capacity and is associated with family violence. The concept of the cumulative risk of harm to vulnerable children is supported by research but is not yet implemented in policy. Reports indicate that some parents who misuse substances have multiple complex needs including comorbid mental health issues, domestic violence, and difficulty in managing their children’s behavior. Early intervention therapies designed to address this cluster of issues are reviewed. Conclusion. There is a need to establish objective assessment instruments that are relevant to the cohort of parents who misuse substances and engage in family violence and to improve policy to ensure vulnerable children and families in which parents misuse substances are referred to appropriate therapies.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Substance Misuse (MESH:D009293)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12027438