1 / 29

The Effects of Brief Incarcerations on Jail Diversion Outcomes for People with Serious Mental Illness

The Effects of Brief Incarcerations on Jail Diversion Outcomes for People with Serious Mental Illness . Academic and Health Policy Conference on Correctional Health Chicago, IL March 22, 2013. Presenter: Allison Gilbert Robertson, Ph.D., M.P.H. Duke University School of Medicine

sinead
Télécharger la présentation

The Effects of Brief Incarcerations on Jail Diversion Outcomes for People with Serious Mental Illness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Effects of Brief Incarcerations on Jail Diversion Outcomes for People with Serious Mental Illness Academic and Health Policy Conference on Correctional Health Chicago, IL March 22, 2013 Presenter: Allison Gilbert Robertson, Ph.D., M.P.H. Duke University School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences allison.gilbert@duke.edu

  2. Sponsor and Collaborators • Duke University Medical Center • Allison Gilbert Robertson, PhD, MPH (PI) • Marvin Swartz, MD (Co-PI) • Connecticut Dept. of Mental Health and Addiction Services (DMHAS)/UConn SSW • Hsiu-Ju Lin, PhD • Linda Frisman, PhD • University of South Florida • John Petrila, JD, LLM This work was funded by Public Health Law Research, a national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

  3. Jail diversion • Court-based jail diversion programs: a growing policy response to problem of CJ involvement among adults with SMI • ~560 diversion programs are currently operating in 47 states • Various program models—MH court structure, others use alternative approaches • Common criteria include: • SMI diagnosis • Many exclude felony or violent offenders • Indication that mental illness was a contributing factor in referral offense, determination of “suitability” • Willingness to comply with court-arranged treatment plan

  4. Jail diversion: what we know now • Generally, significant reductions in recidivism are evident • But improvements are modest • Evidence lacking on which program components predict successful diversion • Access to treatment services. . . ? • A legal mechanism that uniquely engages participants and promotes their success. . . ?

  5. CT’s jail diversion program • CT one of two states with an innovative, statewide jail diversion program • Community MH clinicians based in courts • Work with court personnel to identify and divert eligible adults SMI • Reports that some judges opt to first put some individuals in jail for a few days to enhance motivation for entering treatment and avoiding a jail sentence - Enhance motivation - Ineffective, inappropriate - Good set up for Tx - Traumatizing • Detox • Stabilization Therapeutic jurisprudence Counter-therapeutic and -productive - or -

  6. Research Questions Compared to immediate diversion, to what extent do brief jail stays before initiating diversion improve outcomes by. . . • further reducing use of crisis-driven health care (i.e., hospitalization and ED visits)? • further reducing recidivism (subsequent arrest and incarceration)?

  7. Study Design Part 1: Observational study of effect of pre-diversion brief incarcerations • Quasi-experimental study of administrative records from public behavioral health and CJ systems for adults with SMI who participated in a statewide jail diversion program in Connecticut during FYs 2006 & 2007 Part 2: Diversion observations and personnel interviews • Observations of jail diversion proceedings in CT courts • Informal interviews with key jail diversion and court personnel

  8. Study Measures Dependent variables • Psychotropic medication adherence • Medication possession ratio • Targeted outpatient service use • Hospitalizations for MH or substance abuse treatment • ED visits • Rearrest • (Re)incarceration

  9. Study Measures Dependent variables • Psychotropic medication adherence • Medication possession ratio • Targeted outpatient service use • Hospitalizations for MH or substance abuse treatment • ED visits • Rearrest • (Re)incarceration

  10. Study Measures Dependent variables • Psychotropic medication adherence • Medication possession ratio • Targeted outpatient service use • Hospitalizations for MH or substance abuse treatment • ED visits • Rearrest • (Re)incarceration

  11. Study Measures Independent variables • Study group variable: “Jail first” - any v. no brief incarceration before diversion • Clinical diagnoses & demographics • Pre-diversion OP service use • Pre-diversion psychotropic medication adherence • Recent offending history

  12. Analysis • Propensity-score matching to identify a balanced comparison group • Multivariable models to estimate effect of jail first on probability and level of recidivism and crisis-driven service use • Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE) for binary outcomes • Mixed-effects, mixed-distribution models for count variables with many zeros • Structural Equation Models for mediation analysis

  13. Clinical and demographic characteristics after propensity matching

  14. Pre-diversion service use and offending characteristics after propensity matching

  15. Regression results

  16. Regression results Individuals with jail first were more likelyto have better improvements in medication adherence over time after diversion and more time with good adherence.

  17. Regression results

  18. Regression results No differences in probability or level of post-diversion incarceration or psych hospitalization between study groups.

  19. Regression results People with good medication adherence were less likely to go to jail after diversion; and among those who did, those with good medication adherence were incarcerated for fewer days.

  20. Regression results Among people with at least one DMHAS hospital day after diversion, those with good medication adherence were hospitalized for fewer days than those with poor adherence.

  21. Interpretations • Outcomes: • Reoffending • Hosp/ED Brief incarceration before diversion + 1 Treatment adherence “Jail first” is significantly associated with improved Tx adherence.

  22. Interpretations • Outcomes: • Reoffending • Hosp/ED Brief incarceration before diversion + NS 2 1 Treatment adherence Our main models suggested that Tx adherence reduces main outcomes, but formal mediation analysis found no significant effect. “Jail first” is significantly associated with improved Tx adherence.

  23. Interpretations 3 And this direct effect of study condition is not evident. • Outcomes: • Reoffending • Hosp/ED Brief incarceration before diversion NS + NS 2 1 Treatment adherence Our main models suggested that Tx adherence reduces main outcomes, but formal mediation analysis found no significant effect. “Jail first” is significantly associated with improved Tx adherence.

  24. Summary and next steps • Explore moderator analyses • Estimating effects of jail before diversion on specific sub-groups (e.g., dual Dx, felony index arrest) • Future research • Examine role of Tx adherence more closely • How/why jail first improve Tx adherence • Why that doesn’t translate to improved health and public safety outcomes

  25. Thank you!

  26. Extra slides

  27. CT site visit and interviews • Semi-structured interviews with key players in jail diversion program • Judge, bail commissioners, public defender, PD social worker, court coordinator, jail diversion clinicians • Key themes emerged • Where goal is to divert clients at arraignment, public safety comes first • “Frequent fliers” among most likely to get some pre-diversion jail time; many perceived to be willingly making bad choices • Need for detox, general stabilization in combination with lack of Tx slots also often means jail time first

  28. Propensity Score Method • Step 1: • Case control match with local greedy algorithm • Is a local matching algorithm, i.e., making optimal matching decisions at each step without attempting to make the best overall global matching decision • Once a match is made, the match is not reconsidered • Study group cases are ordered and sequentially matched to the nearest unmatched control group cases • If more than one unmatched control matches to a case, the control is random selected • 92 cases matched • Step 2: • Distance score within same quintile • For 10 un-matched cases, distance scores were computed between treated cases unmatched control cases with the same quintile • Unmatched control case with smallest absolute distance is selected • All 102 matched, and all covariates were balanced between study and control groups

  29. Latent Growth Curve Analysis Baseline- CJ Slope- CJ 0.368 0.082 0.210 Study group -1.075* -2.086 -0.205** 0.031** Baseline - Rx Slope- Rx

More Related