| Literature DB >> 27690077 |
Amanda E Perry1, Rebecca Woodhouse2, Matthew Neilson3, Marrissa Martyn St James4, Julie Glanville5, Catherine Hewitt6, Dominic Trépel7.
Abstract
Background: The numbers of incarcerated people suffering from drug dependence has steadily risen since the 1980s and only a small proportion of these receive appropriate treatment. A systematic review to evaluate the effectiveness and economic evidence of non-pharmacological interventions for drug using offenders was conducted.Entities:
Keywords: drug treatment; economic appraisal; offenders; systematic review
Year: 2016 PMID: 27690077 PMCID: PMC5086705 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph13100966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Statistical treatment.
Classification scheme for economic evaluations (Drummond 2005).
| Examine consequences only | Examine only costs | |||
| 1B PARTIAL EVALUATION 1B | 2 PARTIAL EVALUATION | |||
| Outcome Description | Cost description | Cost-outcome description | ||
| 3A PARTIAL EVALUATION 3B | 4 FULL ECONOMIC EVALUATION | |||
| Efficacy effectiveness evaluation (e.g., RCT) | Cost analysis | Cost effectiveness analysis | ||
Figure 2PRISMA Flow Diagram.
Figure 3Does any type of Non-Pharmacological intervention reduce subsequent criminal activity?
Figure 4Does any type of Non-Pharmacological intervention reduce subsequent drug use?
Figure 5Does Intervention type impact on subsequent criminal activity?
Available economic information (resource use and/or cost) and evaluation type according to Drummond Classification Scheme (see Table 1).
| Author (Year) | Sample Description | Intervention Summary | Does the Study Describe Resources Use AND/OR Costs for: | Drummond Score | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interventions | Healthcare | Criminality | Productivity | Other Public Goods | ||||
| Chandler & Spicer (2006) | Jail recidivists with serious mental illness and substance use disorder | Dual Disorder Treatment program | - | √ | √ | - | - | 3B |
| Henggeler (1999) | Young offenders | Community based MST [ | - | √ | √ | - | √ | 3A |
| Henggeler (2006) | Young offenders | Family and Drug Court with Community Services including MST and enhanced contingency management | - | √ | √ | - | - | 3A |
| Marlowe (2008) | Male adult offenders with no more than two previous convictions and in need of treatment for drug dependence | Drug court and contingency management programme. | √ | √ | √ | - | - | 3A |
| McCollister (2007) | Juveniles offenders meeting the diagnostic criteria for substance abuse | Drug court combined with a number of different therapies. | - | - | √ | √ | - | 3B |
| Petersilia (1992) | Male adult offenders sentenced to community-based supervision | Intensive probation supervision. | - | - | √ | √ | - | 3A |
| Rossman (1999) | Male adults referred to a community-based program. | Opportunity to Succeed Scheme. | √ | √ | √ | √ | √ | 4 |
| Sacks (2004) | Male adult offenders with a serious mental disorder and substance use | Therapeutic Community [ | √ | √ | √ | √ | - | 3A |
| Schoenwald (1996) | Young offenders | Community based MST [ | √ | √ | √ | - | - | 4 |
| Shanahan (2004) | Male and female offenders referred to an adult drug court | Drug court | √ | √ | √ | - | - | 4 |