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Post: Children of Parents with Addictions AI to break the cycle
Children of parents with addictions carry a kind of invisible backpack: fear, responsibility, shame, and hyper-awareness. Many become experts at reading danger in a room before they can even spell the word âaddiction.â Itâs exhausting, and none of it is their fault.
If you grew up (or are growing up) with a parent who struggles with alcohol or drugs, itâs easy to believe youâre âmarkedâ by their choices. Maybe you worry youâll end up the same way. Maybe youâre already parenting your younger self through your own kids and trying not to repeat what you saw.
Hereâs the blunt truth: children of parents with addictions are at higher risk, but they are not doomed. Research shows that supportive relationships, good coping skills, and stable environments dramatically cut the chances of repeating the pattern.
Weâre also living in a moment where AI can add another layer of supportânot to replace therapists or real-life connection, but to fill some of the gaps: late-night listening, simple coping tools, and better information for kids, parents, and schools.
This guide walks through:
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What life is really like for children of parents with addictions
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Why genetics and history are not a life sentence
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How AI can safely support children, families, and professionals
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Practical next steps to start breaking the cycleâtoday
đ The reality for children of parents with addictions
Addiction doesnât stay in one personâs bloodstream. It seeps into bedtime, homework, money, mood, and safety.
In both Canada and the U.S., a huge number of children live with a parent who has a substance use disorder. Recent U.S. data suggests about 1 in 4 childrenânearly 19 millionâlive with at least one parent with a substance use disorder, and Canadian analyses show similar exposure rates over time.
Behind each statistic is a home that feels like this:
đ Unpredictable homes and walking on eggshells
You never know which version of your parent youâre going to get:
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Sober and loving
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Numb and checked out
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Angry, chaotic, or simply gone
Kids quickly learn to scan for danger: tone of voice, footsteps, the smell of alcohol, how the keys hit the table. Their nervous system stays on high alert, which can show up later as anxiety, sleep problems, and difficulty relaxing even when things are objectively âfine.â
đ§ When kids become the adults (parentification)
In many families with addiction, kids become the unofficial adults:
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Making meals, getting siblings ready, managing bedtimes
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Covering up for a parent (âTheyâre just tired / sickâ)
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Trying to keep the peace so nothing âsets them offâ
This is called parentificationâand while it can build responsibility and empathy, it also steals time, energy, and the sense of being allowed to just be a kid.
đ¤ Secrecy, stigma, and the weight of silence
Addiction carries heavy stigma. Kids often hear:
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âDonât tell anyone.â
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âWhat happens in this house stays in this house.â
So they learn to lie to protect the family and hide their own pain. That secrecy cuts them off from support at exactly the moment they need it most. It also teaches that honesty is dangerous, and that their job is to protect the grown-upsânot the other way around.
đ Emotional strain, trauma, and the bodyâs alarms
Children of parents with addictions are more likely to experience:
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Emotional neglect
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Verbal or physical conflict
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Sudden changes (money issues, moves, breakups, jail, detox, relapse)
This chronic stress can cause real health effectsâheadaches, stomach aches, trouble concentrating, and later, higher risk of mental health struggles.
Important: None of this says anything about a childâs worth or potential. It only describes the starting pointânot the finish line.
đ§ Why children of parents with addictions are not doomed to repeat the cycle
Yes, the risk is real. But risk â destiny. We know a lot about what actually helps children of parents with addictions build healthy lives.
đ Awareness as armor against addiction
Kids who grow up around addiction donât need a âscared straightâ lecture. Theyâve lived it.
They remember:
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Missed birthdays
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Broken promises
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Embarrassing scenes in public
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The fear of not knowing what version of the parent is coming home
That lived experience can become internal armor. When alcohol or drugs show up in their own teenage or adult lives, theyâre not just curiousâtheyâre cautious. With support, that awareness becomes a strong reason to say, âIâm not going down that road.â
đ§Š Supportive adults and safe relationships
Research on resilience is crystal clear: one stable, supportive adult can change everything.
That person might be:
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A teacher who actually listens
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A coach who notices when somethingâs off
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A grandparent, aunt, or uncle
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A therapist, youth worker, or faith leader
What matters is consistency and safety. When a child experiences at least one relationship where they are believed, valued, and not responsible for fixing the adult, it rewrites their expectations of what âloveâ is allowed to feel like.
đ ī¸ Coping skills and boundaries as cycle-breakers
Addiction often grows where there is untreated trauma, emotional pain, or mental illness. Children who learn:
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How to name feelings
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How to self-soothe without substances
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How to set boundaries
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How to ask for help
âĻare learning skills many parents never got. These are cycle-breaking tools. Studies on children of parents with alcohol and substance use disorders show that self-efficacy (believing you can handle challenges) and social support are powerful protective factors.
đ§Ŧ Genetics are not destiny
Can addiction run in families? Yes. But genes are just one piece of the puzzle:
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Family history may increase vulnerability
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Environment, relationships, and coping skills massively shape outcomes
Think of genetics as a loaded deckânot a forced move. With the right buffers (support, therapy, good information, lower exposure to substances, healthier stress outlets), children of parents with addictions can beat the odds.
đļ Small choices that build a new path
Breaking the cycle rarely comes from one giant, dramatic decision. It usually looks like:
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Choosing friends who respect your boundaries
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Saying no to environments where you know things get wild
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Joining a sport, club, or activity that makes you feel strong and seen
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Talking honestly with a counselor or trusted adult
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Learning how to handle emotions without numbing them
These might feel small in the moment. Over time, they build a life that looks nothing like the chaos you grew up in.
đ¤ How AI can support children of parents with addictions
Letâs be blunt: AI is not a therapist. Experts are warningâloudlyâagainst using chatbots as stand-alone mental health treatment, especially for young people. But when AI is used responsibly, with clear limits, it can still be a useful helper.
Think of AI as extra scaffolding around the real work: human support, therapy, school, and community.
đŦ AI as a late-night listener (with safety boundaries)
Many kids (and adult children) feel the worst at night:
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The house is quiet
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The mind is loud
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Thereâs no one they want to âbotherâ
AI-powered chat tools and mental health apps can:
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Offer a non-judgmental space to vent
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Prompt journaling (âWhat went okay today?â)
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Teach simple grounding exercises (breathing, 5-senses check-ins)
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Reflect feelings back in plain language
Clinical trials show that AI-supported chatbots like Woebot and Wysa can reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression in adults and young people over short periods. Theyâre not magic, but they can help some people feel less alone between therapy sessionsâor before they get one.
However:
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They must never be treated as emergency support.
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They should always encourage users to reach real-life help when in crisis.
If a child is in immediate danger or talking about self-harm, the right action is still 911 / local emergency services, crisis lines, or in-person help.
đ AI explaining addiction in kid-friendly ways
A lot of children secretly think:
âIf I were better, my parent would stop.â
AI-powered educational tools can:
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Explain addiction as a health condition, not a childâs fault
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Use age-appropriate language and stories
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Answer sensitive questions they may be embarrassed to ask an adult
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Normalize mixed feelings: love, anger, relief, guilt, confusion
Used well, AI can turn clinical research into plain-English explanations in different reading levels and languages, making it easier for kids to understand whatâs happening without blaming themselves.
đ¨âđŠâđ§ AI tools that support parents in recovery
When a parent is trying to get sober, their brain, body, and emotions are busy surviving. Remembering every tool from therapy can be hard.
AI-assisted tools can help parents:
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Track mood, cravings, and triggers
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Get in-the-moment coping ideas (âPause. Text your sponsor. Go for a 5-minute walk.â)
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Plan honest conversations with their children
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Brainstorm simple ways to rebuild trust (small rituals, consistent routines)
As evidence grows for digital mental health tools, many experts now see them as useful add-ons to treatment, not replacements. A steadier parent means a steadier homeâand that directly protects children of parents with addictions.
đĢ AI helping teachers and counselors notice silent struggles
Most kids donât walk into school and say, âMy dad is using again.â But their data sometimes speaks:
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More absences
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Sudden grade drops
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Frequent nurse visits
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Big shifts in behavior or mood
With strict privacy and ethical rules, AI could help schools spot concerning patterns sooner and nudge staff to check in:
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âThis studentâs attendance and grades changed quicklyâconsider a gentle conversation.â
AI can also help counselors:
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Draft age-appropriate explanations of addiction
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Build personalized safety plans
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Find local resources faster
Of course, humans must always stay in charge; AI just helps them focus attention where itâs needed most.
đ AI-powered mental health education and resources
AI can turn dry health information into:
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Stories and comics about kids living with parental addiction
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Interactive exercises about emotional regulation and boundaries
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Multi-language resources for families with language barriers
For families who canât easily access therapy due to cost, distance, or stigma, well-designed digital tools can be a first step toward understanding and change.
đĄī¸ Guardrails: making sure AI stays safe and ethical
For AI to actually help children of parents with addictions, it needs serious guardrails:
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Clear disclaimers that it does not replace professional care
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Crisis language: always tell users to contact emergency services or crisis lines in urgent situations
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Strong privacy protections (especially for minors)
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Co-design with clinicians, youth, and people with lived experience of addiction
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Oversight from regulators and independent experts
Used without these safeguards, AI for mental health can actually make things worse or delay real help.
đą Practical ways to break the cycle (with or without AI)
AI is a tool, not a savior. The real power still lives in people and choices. Hereâs how different groups can help break the cycle for children of parents with addictions.
đ For children and teens
If this is your life right now (or was your life growing up):
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Name whatâs happening. âMy parent has an addictionâ is more accurateâand less self-blamingâthan âMy family is just messed up.â
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Find one safe adult. Teacher, counselor, relative, coachâsomeone you can tell the truth to.
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Learn basic coping tools. Breathing skills, journaling, exercise, time with safe friends.
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Use AI as a helper, not a judge. If you use mental health apps or chatbots, treat them like practice wheelsânot the bike. Let them help you organize your thoughts, then bring those thoughts to real people.
You are allowed to want a different life than the one you grew up in. That doesnât make you disloyal. It makes you brave.
đ§âđ§âđ§ For other caregivers and relatives
If youâre a grandparent, aunt, uncle, or family friend:
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Show up consistently. Predictability is medicine for kids from chaotic homes.
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Donât trash the parent in front of the child. You can be honest without putting the child in the middle.
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Help them access support. That might mean counseling, Alateen or similar groups, or youth programs focused on resilience.
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Leverage tech wisely. Help them find age-appropriate, credible apps or online resources (not random TikTok âtherapyâ).
đ§âđĢ For teachers, coaches, and youth workers
You donât need to be a therapist to be a lifeline.
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Notice patterns. Sudden behavior changes, withdrawal, exhaustion, or âadult-likeâ worry can all be clues.
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Offer low-pressure openings. âYou seem really tired lately; is anything making life harder right now?â
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Know your local resources. School counselors, community agencies, and national organizations like NACoA (National Association for Children of Addiction) provide guidance and materials.
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Use AI as a planning tool. It can help you draft letters to parents, create lesson materials about emotions, or adapt information for different reading levels. But you stay the filter.
đ§ââī¸ For professionals designing AI tools
If youâre building AI systems in this space:
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Co-design with lived experience. Involve children of parents with addictions, recovered parents, and clinicians from the start.
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Bake safety into the core. Default to conservative responses, clear crisis guidance, and strong disclaimers.
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Aim for âaugment, not replace.â The best designs help real humansâtherapists, teachers, parentsâdo their work better.
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Study harms, not just wins. Pay attention to over-reliance, delayed help-seeking, or misinterpretations.
⨠A new story: children of parents with addictions can build healthier futures
Children of parents with addictions start life on a harder difficulty setting. Thereâs no point pretending otherwise. But âhard modeâ is not the same as âno chance.â
Evidence shows that:
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Many children of parents with addictions grow up to avoid addiction themselves
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Resilience is built through supportive adults, skills, and opportunities
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Digital and AI tools can help widen access to information and emotional supportâif theyâre used thoughtfully and safely
Children of parents with addictions do not have to repeat their parentsâ footsteps. Theyâre allowed to choose calm over chaos, honesty over secrecy, and support over silence. AI canât heal trauma or hug a child, but it can:
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Give them a place to put words to feelings
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Help parents in recovery stay on track
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Alert adults when a quiet kid might need a check-in
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Turn complex science into understandable guidance
The real power, though, still lives in people: the kid who tells the truth for the first time, the teacher who notices, the counselor who listens, the parent who gets help, the developer who builds safer tools.
If youâor someone you loveâgrew up as a child of a parent with addiction, you are not broken. Youâre carrying a heavy story. And with support, tools, and (yes) carefully used AI, you can write a very different next chapter.
If you need help navigating tech, tools, and mental health resources, consider reaching out through your siteâs Contact or Health support pages so youâre not trying to untangle this alone.
â FAQs: children of parents with addictions & AI support
1. Are children of parents with addictions doomed to become addicted themselves?
No. They are at higher risk, but not doomed. Protective factorsâlike a stable adult, good coping skills, supportive peers, and treatment for any traumaâcan significantly reduce the chance of addiction in later life.
2. How common is it for a child to live with a parent who has an addiction?
Recent U.S. data suggests about one in four children live with a parent who has a substance use disorder, and Canadian estimates show similar patterns over time.
3. What are signs a child might be struggling at home because of addiction?
Watch for sudden grade changes, frequent absences, chronic tiredness, unexplained health complaints, extreme perfectionism or caretaking, and strong reactions to discussions about alcohol or drugs. None of these prove anything alone, but together theyâre a signal to check in.
4. How can AI help children of parents with addictions safely?
AI can offer late-night listening, journaling prompts, simple coping tools, and clear explanations of addiction. It can also help adults create educational materials or spot patterns that need attention. It should always point to human help for crises and never position itself as treatment.
5. Are AI mental health chatbots safe for kids and teens?
They can be helpful when chosen carefully and used under adult guidance, but theyâre not risk-free. Experts warn about over-reliance, bad advice, and delayed access to proper care. They should supplement, not replace, real-world support.
6. What can I do as a parent in recovery to help my child heal?
Stay in treatment, be honest at an age-appropriate level, apologize for past harm, and show change through consistent behavior. Family-centered therapy and support groups can help you repair trust together, and digital tools may help you track your own mood and triggers between sessions.
7. How can teachers support students whose parents have addictions?
Offer a safe, calm presence. Avoid shaming language about âaddicts.â Work with school counselors to connect students with services. Use education materials from organizations like NACoA to better understand what these kids face and how to talk about it.
8. What offline support options exist for children of parents with addictions?
Options include school counseling, community mental health centers, support groups like Alateen or similar local programs, youth mentorship programs, and family-focused treatment centers that specifically include children in care.
9. Can genetics make children of parents with addictions more vulnerable?
Yes, genetic factors can increase vulnerability, but they donât dictate outcomes. Environment, support, and coping skills strongly influence whether someone develops a substance use disorder.
10. How can adult children of parents with addictions start breaking the cycle now?
Begin by naming your experience, seeking therapy or support groups, learning healthier coping tools, and setting clear boundaries in relationships. You can also use AI tools for journaling or educationâas long as you pair them with human support instead of using them alone.
Sources & References
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National Institutes of Health â Millions of U.S. kids live with parents with substance use disordersNational Institutes of Health (NIH)+1
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Statistics Canada â Trajectories of psychological distress among Canadian adults (childhood exposure to parental addiction)Statistics Canada
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WÅodarczyk et al. â Protective mental health factors in children of parents with alcohol use disordersPMC+1
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Torous et al. â The evolving field of digital mental healthPMC
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NIMH â Technology and the Future of Mental Health TreatmentNational Institute of Mental Health
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Karkosz, Fitzpatrick, Haque et al. â Clinical evidence on Woebot and Wysa chatbotsSpringerLink+3PMC+3JMIR Mental Health+3
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NACoA â Resources for children of parents with addictionNACoA




