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Substance Use, Trauma And Parenting: Challenges And Intervention
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Title IV-E Child Welfare Spring 2021 Dialogue
Presenter: Ruth Paris, Associate Professor and Chair, Clinical Practice Department, School of Social Work, Boston University
Ruth Paris, chair of the Clinical Practice Department, is recognized for her
expertise in trauma and infant and early childhood mental health (IECMH),
including a particular focus on families struggling with substance and opioid
use disorders (SUDs and OUDs). With support from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), other federal funders and private foundations, she has developed and evaluated multiple attachment-based interventions targeted at vulnerable families with young children.
Paris’ work is driven by her desire to develop effective and accessible
interventions that are feasible in community settings, culturally responsive,
benefit families with young children and make substantive sense in the field.
She is currently evaluating BRIGHT, (Building Resilience Through Intervention: Growing Healthier Together), a dyadic therapeutic parenting intervention offered within substance use treatment programs. Additionally, with a grant from HRSA, Paris is testing BRIGHT in a randomized controlled trial for pregnant and parenting women with SUD/OUD in a prenatal clinic at Boston Medical Center.
Presenter: Ruth Paris, Associate Professor and Chair, Clinical Practice Department, School of Social Work, Boston University
Ruth Paris, chair of the Clinical Practice Department, is recognized for her
expertise in trauma and infant and early childhood mental health (IECMH),
including a particular focus on families struggling with substance and opioid
use disorders (SUDs and OUDs). With support from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), other federal funders and private foundations, she has developed and evaluated multiple attachment-based interventions targeted at vulnerable families with young children.
Paris’ work is driven by her desire to develop effective and accessible
interventions that are feasible in community settings, culturally responsive,
benefit families with young children and make substantive sense in the field.
She is currently evaluating BRIGHT, (Building Resilience Through Intervention: Growing Healthier Together), a dyadic therapeutic parenting intervention offered within substance use treatment programs. Additionally, with a grant from HRSA, Paris is testing BRIGHT in a randomized controlled trial for pregnant and parenting women with SUD/OUD in a prenatal clinic at Boston Medical Center.