Drink and Drugs News DDN Dec 2017 | Page 18

Perpetrators of domestic violence are being helped to challenge and change their behaviour , as Phil Price explains

Domestic violence

Perpetrators of domestic violence are being helped to challenge and change their behaviour , as Phil Price explains

Stopping the hurt

For all the evidence linking domestic violence with drug and alcohol misuse , there ’ s little Four in every ten men shared knowledge of how we can best collaborate to promote safe and effective attending treatment for solutions . This is a shame , as our experience of working with perpetrators highlights the very real benefits for everyone involved – when the right substance use have approach is used .

The Domestic Violence Intervention Project , which been physically or takes referrals from around 30 London boroughs , worked with Cranstoun Drug Services to develop the Men and Masculinities programme to help men in sexually violent towards recovery challenge and change the behaviour that has caused distress and damage in their relationships . their intimate partner in

Four in every ten men attending treatment for substance use have been physically or sexually violent towards their intimate partner in the previous 12 the previous 12 months . months . Our programme works with men who use physically and sexually violent behaviours , as well the man to control the woman and children further . emotional abuse and coercive control ( we define

By the later sessions we expect perpetrators to coercive control in its broadest sense ). have stopped their physical and sexual violence and Working with drug and alcohol professionals , we stopped , or significantly reduced , their use of alcohol use a special screening tool to identify these and / or drugs in a way that instrumentally harms , perpetrators within their cohorts . The tool is a positive scares or controls their partner . mechanism to help perpetrators start taking
None of this is about anger management or responsibility for their actions , make sense of the counselling groups . Sessions instead create a worst of themselves and their experiences , and challenging environment while offering support for understand how they ended up in treatment and how personal change by addressing issues of masculinity , they came to be hurting their families . sexual respect , the instrumental and systematic

Sessions are specifically designed to address nature of intimate partner violence , and intimacy . intimate partner violence and draw on a wide range of They also include specific modules around the approaches including cognitive-behavioural , social impact of domestic violence and substance use on learning theory , psychodrama , psychotherapeutic and children , considering post-violence parenting , fear and relationship skills teaching . Using group discussions , shame-based parenting , attachment , post-separation perpetrators share their own stories and experiences abuse , and letting go . and are then encouraged to apply insights they have gained to their own behaviours and attitudes . The programme makes survivor safety its single

We use exercises to explicitly name the substance most important priority , as do other Respectaccredited programmes . This stamp of approval use and its effects on the partner and children – the perpetrator ’ s use , what they gain from this in the from Respect ( the accreditation body for short and long term , how a partner may use domestic violence perpetrator programmes in the UK ) is substances as a coping strategy for the abusive man ’ s very important to us and provides a mark of good behaviour , and how it may be used instrumentally by practice for referrers , partner agencies and service users .

As part of this safety commitment , any man accessing treatment for his use of violence and abuse must provide contact details for the people at risk from his violence so we can provide support , safety and confidentiality for the victims of his violence .

The Men and Masculinities programme works from a drug and alcohol perspective because it deals with some of the greatest triggers for relapse by encouraging perpetrators to think through fundamental aspects of their life – relationships , conflict and contact with their children .
Working in Islington , we have now run two full programmes and , so far , worked with 30 men in total . Of the 27 men who started treatment in the Men and Masculinities group programme , 77 per cent completed at least 30 hours of intervention relating to their use of coercive control and violence .
Men on the programme recorded ( via TOPS ) reducing their drug and alcohol use by 29 per cent and recorded a 40 per cent improvement in their quality of life . Active , supportive contact was established with more than half of the attendees ’ partners / ex-partners .

At the Domestic Violence Intervention Project , we ’ re used to saying that no single agency , sector or service can solve DV simply because it is such a complex problem – but the same is true of drug and alcohol misuse . Implementation of the forthcoming Domestic Violence and Abuse Bill and responses to Ofsted ’ s recent call for a greater focus on perpetrators and DV prevention strategies put an onus on those working in both fields to recognise their mutual need and benefit .

More of us now need to share what we know and build new understandings to fill the current gap in service provision for integrated DV and substance misuse support , while making sure that the survivor ’ s safety is always at the centre and is the focus of all our work .
Phil Price is development manager at the Domestic Violence Intervention Project ( DVIP )
18 | drinkanddrugsnews | December / January 2018 www . drinkanddrugsnews . com