Substance abuse counselors and social workers often recommend recovering addicts establish new networks of non-using friends and supporters.
But researchers at ӰƵ’s social work school found, for many women in poverty, it’s not so easy to drop the users in their lives. Many are people who women depend on for child care, transportation and other necessities to live.
“People in the women’s networks might be family members, parents or children, who also use drugs. It’s hard to cut these people out of their lives,” said Elizabeth M. Tracy, associate dean of research and the Grace Longwell Coyle Professor of Social Work at the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences.
She contributed to the Qualitative Health Research article, “Personal Network Recovery Enablers and Relapse Risks for Women with Substance Dependence.” The National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) funded the $1.1 million, four-year parent study at the Mandel School.
It was not so clear-cut for these women who had to juggle both users and non-users in their lives, said the study’s corresponding investigator Suzanne Brown, assistant professor of social work at Wayne State University and Mandel School doctoral alumna.
“It might work in a population of people who have greater choices or resources to make geographic changes or are less dependent on other people for their basic needs,” Brown said.
Relationships in the network played a role in whether women used drugs or not.
Brown and Tracy and colleagues found that six months post-treatment intake, women were vulnerable for using again if they had substance abusers in their personal networks or lacked close supportive friends.
And many of the 377 women recruited for the study from three treatment centers in Cleveland also lacked finances, education, job skills and employment, making it difficult to leave these circumstances.
Loss and fear of losing family and friends, along with the stigma and guilt of using, presented difficult barriers for recovery, the researchers report.
Tracy said these women had no easy answers as some women limited interactions with their longtime friends and suffered grief and loss in the process to stay clean.
The researcher tracked and analyzed how these networks worked and changed over the 12 months after entering treatment. For the focus groups, conducted with funding from the Mandel School Office of Research and Training as an additional part of the larger study, the researchers talked with participants in three focus groups of women in recovery and three focus groups of treatment providers.
Each woman in treatment made a list of 25 people in her personal network, their relationship, role in recovery and whether they could be considered a recovery enabler or relapse risk.
Participants in the yearlong study provided researchers with data after beginning treatment: at one week, one month, six months and 12 months, regardless if they remained in treatment or not.
For the women, researchers looked at these questions:
- Who remained in the personal network?
- How relationships with friends, family member, treatment counselors and others changed over time?
- What ways did the person change in her interactions with the individuals in her network?