
Using These Resources: Parental Addiction
Resources to help providers offer hope and support to children and families coping with the challenges of parental addiction.
These resources are for anyone serving children and families affected by drug addiction or alcoholism. As a provider, you can be a stabilizing force in the lives of children and adults. Despite the challenges presented by parental addiction, children and families can be incredibly resourceful and resilient… which can begin within the power of relationships with supportive adults like you.
These materials can help you:
- Explain the Influence of a Caring Adult. Trusted adults can help children talk about their feelings without criticism or judgment. Connections and relationships hold healing power. There are ways for caring adults to explain addiction to young children and build a sense of hope for a healthier future.
- Explain Addiction to Young Children. Adults can explain that addiction is a sickness, a disease (not the kind you catch like a cold) in which people feel that they need drugs or alcohol to feel good/okay. Like any sickness, people need treatment to get better.
- Help Children and Families Feel Less Shame and Isolation. It’s hard to talk about a parent’s addiction, but trained professionals—and others with similar experiences—can help. Addiction brings secretiveness, fear, embarrassment, confusion, shame, and loneliness. But it doesn’t have to be this way, and children may need to hear again and again that many other children go through this—no child is alone.
- Build Resilience, Hope, and Optimism. Many children and their families have the inner strength to help them through tough times. They can be resilient and can heal from their experiences. They can find ways to reestablish trust. These experiences can make a family stronger. Accepting or reaching out for help is the first step.
What Do Children Need?
- To know who they can be attached to, who they can trust, and who cares about them.
- Adults to whom they can look for a sense of security and safety.
- The reminder that addiction is a grown-up problem and that only grown-ups can figure out how make it better; children’s only job should be to “just be a kid.”
- To feel seen and heard, and to have a voice. Children need grown-ups to say things such as, “Tell me what you’re thinking/feeling.” “I see that you’re feeling ______.” “I’m listening to you.” “You can ask me for help.” “I’m proud of you for ______.” “What was the best/worst part of your day?”
- A sense of being acknowledged when they have questions, and to get age-appropriate answers.
- Reminders that no matter how bad things get, there are reasons to stay hopeful and optimistic. For instance, adults might say, “We can always hope that things will get better.” “Lots of people get better from addiction.”
People with the above qualities are children’s “safe people.”
What Do Adults Need to Hear?
- This is really hard, what you’re going through.
- You can learn ways to cope and heal, and children can learn coping strategies too. You can model them.
- There are ways to reestablish trust.
- You are not alone.
- Addiction is a sickness, and you can get better.
- It’s brave to ask for help.
- This can make you and your family stronger.
- Children often have the inner strength to help them through this. They can be resilient and can heal from their experiences. You can be an effective caregiver to your children.
The activities and resources are meant to be flexible and to be used in different settings and configurations: one-on-one, small groups, or large groups. Use them any way you see fit—you know your clients best.
Advisers
Bethany Case, Victim Justice Program Specialist, the Office for Victims of Crimes (OVC) Federal, International and Tribal Division
Daryl D. Jackson, Ph.D., former Program Coordinator for the Greater Cleveland Drug Court; President of Rhinehart, Rambert & Associates Counseling Firm LLC
Peter Kreiner, Ph.D., Senior Scientist at the Institute for Behavioral Health, Brandeis University
Jerry Moe, MA, National Director of Children’s Programs at the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation
Kurt Newman, MD, President and CEO, Children’s National Health System
Karen Pershing, Executive Director, Metro Drug Coalition, Knoxville, Tennessee
Robin H. Steinhorn, MD, Senior Vice President for Hospital Specialties at Children’s National Health System, Washington, DC
Sis Wenger, President/CEO, National Association for Children of Addiction
Robert C. Williams, BS, GAIN, CFS, Managing Partner, Integrated Community Solutions

Plan and Protect
An article about planning for safe caregiving when dealing with substance use.

Thinking Ahead: A Care Plan
A printable page to help plan for children’s care in case of unexpected challenges.

Routines at the Ready: Weekly Schedule
A printable tool for keeping up with routines.

All About Karli: A Story About Reconnecting
A story about reconnecting after a parent and child’s time apart during recovery from addiction.

Guest Post: When Plans Don’t Go As Planned
When routines and plans get interrupted, there are ways to talk with children and show them that they’re still safe and loved.

Supporting Whole Family Recovery with Sesame Street
A heartfelt and practical discussion on what it means to reunify as a family after treatment for addiction.

I Can Take Good Care of Myself
A printable page to remind children of all the ways they care for themselves.