The burden of prenatal and early life maternal substance use among children at risk of maltreatment: A systematic review

Author:

Powell Madeleine12ORCID,Pilkington Rhiannon3,Varney Bianca2,Havard Alys12ORCID,Lynch John34,Dobbins Timothy2,Oei Ju Lee56ORCID,Ahmed Tasnia2,Falster Kathleen2

Affiliation:

1. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre UNSW Sydney Sydney Australia

2. School of Population Health UNSW Sydney Sydney Australia

3. School of Public Health University of Adelaide Adelaide Australia

4. Population Health Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

5. School of Women's and Children's Health UNSW Sydney Sydney Australia

6. Royal Hospital for Women New South Wales Health Sydney Australia

Abstract

AbstractIssuesAlthough maternal substance use is a known risk factor for child maltreatment, evidence on the scale of substance use is needed to inform prevention responses. This systematic review synthesised prevalence estimates of maternal substance use during pregnancy and early life among children at risk of maltreatment. Ovid, Pubmed, CINAHL, PsychInfo and ProQuest databases were searched. We included observational studies that sampled children at risk of maltreatment in high‐income countries and reported information on maternal substance use during pregnancy and/or the child's first year of life. We extracted study characteristics and data to calculate prevalence, assessed risk of bias and conducted a narrative synthesis; there were insufficient comparable populations or outcomes to quantitatively synthesise results.Key FindingsThirty five of 14,084 titles were included. Fifteen studies had adequately sized and representative samples to estimate prevalence. Maternal substance use prevalence ranged from 2.4% to 40.6%. Maternal substance use was highest among infants referred to child protection at birth (40.6%) and children in out‐of‐home care (10.4% to 37.2%). Prevalence was higher when studies defined substance use more broadly and when maternal substance use was ascertained from both child and mother records.ImplicationsSupportive, coordinated responses to maternal substance use are needed from health and child protection services, spanning alcohol and other drug treatment, antenatal and postnatal care.ConclusionsPrenatal and early life maternal substance use is common among child maltreatment populations, particularly among younger children and those with more serious maltreatment.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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