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Studies: Crime and Substance Abuse

Version 6.1 by Ryan C on 2025/06/21 06:33

Crime and Substance Abuse

Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program

Source: *Substance Use & Misuse*
Date of Publication: *2002*
Author(s): *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
Title: *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
DOI: [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
Subject Matter: *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*

📊 Key Statistics
  1. General Observations:
       - Study examined drug treatment court success rates among first-time offenders.
       - Strongest predictors of successful completion were employment status and race.

2. Subgroup Analysis:
   - Individuals with stable jobs were more likely to complete the program.
   - Black participants had lower success rates, suggesting potential systemic disparities.

3. Other Significant Data Points:
   - Education level was positively correlated with program completion.
   - Frequency of drug use before enrollment affected treatment outcomes.

🔬 Findings
  1. Primary Observations:
       - Social stability factors (employment, education) were key to treatment success.
       - Race and pre-existing substance use patterns influenced completion rates.

2. Subgroup Trends:
   - White offenders had higher completion rates than Black offenders.
   - Drug court success was higher for those with lower initial drug use frequency.

3. Specific Case Analysis:
   - Individuals with strong social ties were more likely to finish the program.
   - Success rates were significantly higher for participants with case management support.

📝 Critique & Observations
  1. Strengths of the Study:
       - First empirical study on drug court program success factors.
       - Uses longitudinal data for post-treatment analysis.

2. Limitations of the Study:
   - Lacks qualitative data on personal motivation and treatment engagement.
   - Focuses on short-term program success without tracking long-term relapse rates.

3. Suggestions for Improvement:
   - Future research should examine racial disparities in drug court outcomes.
   - Study how community resources impact long-term recovery.

📌 Relevance to Subproject

- Provides insight into what factors contribute to drug court program success.
- Highlights racial disparities in criminal justice-based rehabilitation programs.
- Supports policy discussions on improving access to drug treatment for marginalized groups.

🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration
  1. Investigate the role of mental health in drug court success rates.
    2. Assess long-term relapse prevention strategies post-treatment.
    3. Explore alternative diversion programs beyond traditional drug courts.
Study: Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys

Source: *Substance Use & Misuse*
Date of Publication: *2003*
Author(s): *Timothy P. Johnson, Phillip J. Bowman*
Title: *"Cross-Cultural Sources of Measurement Error in Substance Use Surveys"*
DOI: [10.1081/JA-120023394](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120023394)
Subject Matter: *Survey Methodology, Racial Disparities, Substance Use Research*

📊 Key Statistics
  1. General Observations:
       - Study examined how racial and cultural factors influence self-reported substance use data.
       - Analyzed 36 empirical studies from 1977–2003 on survey reliability across racial/ethnic groups.

2. Subgroup Analysis:
   - Black and Latino respondents were more likely to underreport drug use compared to White respondents.
   - Cultural stigma and distrust in research institutions affected self-report accuracy.

3. Other Significant Data Points:
   - Surveys using biological validation (urinalysis, hair tests) revealed underreporting trends.
   - Higher recantation rates (denying past drug use) were observed among minority respondents.

🔬 Findings
  1. Primary Observations:
       - Racial/ethnic disparities in substance use reporting bias survey-based research.
       - Social desirability and cultural norms impact data reliability.

2. Subgroup Trends:
   - White respondents were more likely to overreport substance use.
   - Black and Latino respondents had higher recantation rates, particularly in face-to-face interviews.

3. Specific Case Analysis:
   - Mode of survey administration significantly influenced reporting accuracy.
   - Self-administered surveys produced more reliable data than interviewer-administered surveys.

📝 Critique & Observations
  1. Strengths of the Study:
       - Comprehensive review of 36 studies on measurement error in substance use reporting.
       - Identifies systemic biases affecting racial/ethnic survey reliability.

2. Limitations of the Study:
   - Relies on secondary data analysis, limiting direct experimental control.
   - Does not explore how measurement error impacts policy decisions.

3. Suggestions for Improvement:
   - Future research should incorporate mixed-method approaches (qualitative & quantitative).
   - Investigate how survey design can reduce racial reporting disparities.

📌 Relevance to Subproject

- Supports research on racial disparities in self-reported health behaviors.
- Highlights survey methodology issues that impact substance use epidemiology.
- Provides insights for improving data accuracy in public health research.

🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration
  1. Investigate how survey design impacts racial disparities in self-reported health data.
    2. Study alternative data collection methods (biometric validation, passive data tracking).
    3. Explore the role of social stigma in self-reported health behaviors.
Study: Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program

Source: *Substance Use & Misuse*
Date of Publication: *2002*
Author(s): *Clifford A. Butzin, Christine A. Saum, Frank R. Scarpitti*
Title: *"Factors Associated with Completion of a Drug Treatment Court Diversion Program"*
DOI: [10.1081/JA-120014424](https://doi.org/10.1081/JA-120014424)
Subject Matter: *Substance Use, Criminal Justice, Drug Courts*

📊 Key Statistics
  1. General Observations:
       - Study examined drug treatment court success rates among first-time offenders.
       - Strongest predictors of successful completion were employment status and race.

2. Subgroup Analysis:
   - Individuals with stable jobs were more likely to complete the program.
   - Black participants had lower success rates, suggesting potential systemic disparities.

3. Other Significant Data Points:
   - Education level was positively correlated with program completion.
   - Frequency of drug use before enrollment affected treatment outcomes.

🔬 Findings
  1. Primary Observations:
       - Social stability factors (employment, education) were key to treatment success.
       - Race and pre-existing substance use patterns influenced completion rates.

2. Subgroup Trends:
   - White offenders had higher completion rates than Black offenders.
   - Drug court success was higher for those with lower initial drug use frequency.

3. Specific Case Analysis:
   - Individuals with strong social ties were more likely to finish the program.
   - Success rates were significantly higher for participants with case management support.

📝 Critique & Observations
  1. Strengths of the Study:
       - First empirical study on drug court program success factors.
       - Uses longitudinal data for post-treatment analysis.

2. Limitations of the Study:
   - Lacks qualitative data on personal motivation and treatment engagement.
   - Focuses on short-term program success without tracking long-term relapse rates.

3. Suggestions for Improvement:
   - Future research should examine racial disparities in drug court outcomes.
   - Study how community resources impact long-term recovery.

📌 Relevance to Subproject

- Provides insight into what factors contribute to drug court program success.
- Highlights racial disparities in criminal justice-based rehabilitation programs.
- Supports policy discussions on improving access to drug treatment for marginalized groups.

🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration
  1. Investigate the role of mental health in drug court success rates.
    2. Assess long-term relapse prevention strategies post-treatment.
    3. Explore alternative diversion programs beyond traditional drug courts.

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