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Impact of jail sanctions during drug court participation upon substance abuse treatment completion
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- This study of participants in a US drug treatment court describes the relationship between the imposition of short-term jail sanctions and substance abuse treatment dropout, and examines offender characteristics moderating or modifying the impact of jail sanctions on treatment dropout.Data were derived from administrative information collected by the Dane County Wisconsin Drug Treatment Court from 1996-2004 on all 573 participants achieving a final disposition of treatment completion or failure during those program years. Iterative Cox proportional hazards models of time to treatment failure were created; jail sanctions during drug court participation were framed as time-dependent covariates. A theoretical framework and specific statistical criteria guided construction of a final parsimonious model of time to treatment drop-out.Treatment failure was associated with unemployment [hazard ratio (HR) in unemployed versus employed = 1.41, P-value 0.0079], lower educational attainment (HR in high school non-graduate versus graduate = 1.41, P = 0.02) and application of the first jail sanction (HR 2.71, P 0.001). The association between treatment failure and a first sanction was considerably stronger for sanctions administered earlier in participation (HR for sanction 1 at30 days 11.34, P-value 0.0002). Conclusions An initial jail sanction for non-adherence may be more likely to foster treatment compliance in less refractory individuals (i.e. those not already acclimated or socialized to incarceration or other corrections interventions). More stringent supervisory conditions and individualized services may be required to reintegrate such offenders and promote longer-term public safety.
- Subjects :
- Male
Patient Dropouts
Time Factors
Substance-Related Disorders
Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic
Mandatory Programs
Criminals
Models, Theoretical
Article
United States
Drug Users
Law Enforcement
Unemployment
Educational Status
Humans
Patient Compliance
Female
Treatment Failure
Proportional Hazards Models
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.pmid..........41e948772a18b1ac2f74d19e44ea26f1