# Perspectives of professionals on the perinatal period as a window of opportunity for change in women with SUD: insights from healthcare, child welfare, substance use, and child protection services

**Authors:** Sarah Vandewalle, Sara Rowaert, Gilbert Lemmens, Sarah De Pauw, Wouter Vanderplasschen

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1668040 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2026-02-04

## TL;DR

This study explores how professionals view the perinatal period as a chance for women with substance use disorders to make positive changes, emphasizing the need for supportive and integrated care.

## Contribution

The study introduces a strengths-based perspective on perinatal care for women with SUD, highlighting the importance of integrated and trauma-informed approaches.

## Key findings

- Professionals identified barriers such as disconnected bodily awareness and mutual avoidance between women and professionals.
- Empowerment through open conversations and trauma-sensitive approaches is crucial for fostering change during the perinatal period.
- Integrated care and intersectoral collaboration are essential for timely and effective support.

## Abstract

The perinatal period is widely recognized as a time of profound transition and heightened vulnerability, particularly for women with substance use disorders (SUD). Adopting a strengths-based perspective, this qualitative study aims to explore how professionals across healthcare, child welfare, substance use, and child protection services in Belgium perceive this period as a window of opportunity for change in women with SUD.

Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 43 professionals, and thematic analysis identified key themes related to barriers, opportunities, and facilitators to achieve change.

Barriers include disconnected bodily awareness, mutual avoidance between women and professionals, limited insight and (self-) reflection on SUD and motherhood, and insufficient support across interpersonal, socioeconomic, and systemic levels. However, professionals also identified several areas that could be reinforced to unlock the period’s transformative potential, reflecting a gradual shift from a deficit-oriented view toward a more strengths-based understanding of perinatal SUD. Empowerment was seen as crucial through open conversations on family planning, psychoeducation on fertility and contraception, access to appropriate contraceptives, and trauma-sensitive, body-oriented approaches that foster connection to pregnancy and the unborn child, as well as the integration of the infant mental health perspective. The perinatal period itself was considered a naturally occurring window of opportunity for change, driven by processes of identity transformation and growing maternal motivation. Professionals emphasized the importance of enhancing professional capacity, particularly in healthcare, and improving screening and referral by midwives and gynecologists. At the care system level, increased and more consistent contact with healthcare services during pregnancy was described as a contextual opportunity for timely support; however, intersectoral collaboration and integrated care were considered essential, alongside a legal prenatal framework that enables early, non-punitive interventions to support both mother and (unborn) child.

These findings underscore the need to move beyond hegemonic discourses that frame strength and deficit, mothering and substance use, or vulnerability and opportunity as binary opposites. Recognizing the ways these dimensions coexist and intersect is vital for developing responsive, relational, and ethically grounded models of perinatal care.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mental health problems (MESH:D000076082), trauma (MESH:D014947), painful (MESH:D010146), child abuse (MESH:C535569), addiction (MESH:D019966), psychiatric (MESH:D001523), anxiety (MESH:D001007), depression (MESH:D003866), maternal (MESH:D000079262), overdose (MESH:D062787), withdrawal (MESH:D013375), dissociation (MESH:D004213), Mental (MESH:D008607), malnutrition (MESH:D044342), death (MESH:D003643), heart defects (MESH:D006330)
- **Chemicals:** substance (MESH:C012600), alcohol (MESH:D000438), SU (-), methadone (MESH:D008691)
- **Species:** Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (no rank) [taxon 11676], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]
- **Cell lines:** HC-11 — Mus musculus (Mouse), Spontaneously immortalized cell line (CVCL_0288), HC-10 — Cricetulus griseus (Chinese hamster), Hybrid cell line (CVCL_1K02)

## Full text

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## References

78 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12914945/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12914945