4.1 Article

High-Risk Offenders Participating in Court-Supervised Substance Abuse Treatment: Characteristics, Treatment Received, and Factors Associated with Recidivism

Journal

JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVICES & RESEARCH
Volume 38, Issue 4, Pages 510-525

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11414-011-9241-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIDA NIH HHS [R01 DA015431-02, K05 DA017648-02, P30 DA016383-02, P30 DA016383-07, R01 DA015431, R01 DA015431-05, R01 DA015431-03, R01 DA015431-04, R01DA15431, K05 DA017648-05, P30 DA016383-06A1, P30 DA016383, P30DA016383, K05 DA017648-03, P30 DA016383-04, P30 DA016383-01A1, K05 DA017648-01A2, P30 DA016383-03, P30 DA016383-03S1, P30 DA016383-04S1, K05 DA017648-04, P30 DA016383-05, K05 DA017648, R01 DA015431-01, K05DA017648] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [R03 MH084434-02, R03 MH084434, R03 MH084434-01A1, R03MH084434-01A1, R03MH084434-02] Funding Source: Medline

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High-risk offenders treated by California's Proposition 36 court-supervised drug treatment initiative account for a disproportionate number of re-arrests (Hawken 2008) undermining the many successes of the program, yet little is known about their characteristics, treatment experiences, or factors that influence re-arrest. To better understand this group, self-reported and administrative data were analyzed on 78 high-risk (five or more convictions in the previous 5 years) and 1,009 low-risk offenders enrolled during 2004. At intake, high-risk offenders were younger, more were male, and more had prior contact with psychiatric and criminal justice systems. Treatment received and the proportion recidivated during the 30-months after treatment assessment were similar across groups, but high-risk offenders had a greater number of re-arrests. The number of re-arrests was increased by high-risk classification, but decreased by receipt of more treatment services and longer treatment length. Moreover, the number of re-arrests was highest among high-risk offenders with shorter treatment lengths, whereas it was similar to that among low-risk offenders if treatment length was longer. To reduce recidivism among high-risk offenders in court-supervised drug treatment, consideration of psychiatric problems and criminal history is needed, as is receipt of sufficient treatment.

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