Literature DB >> 35450474

What Matters More in Explaining Drug Court Graduation and Rearrest: Program Features, Individual Characteristics, or Some Combination.

Alex Breno1, Niloofar Ramezani1, Wendy Guastaferro2, Andrew Cummings3, Amy Murphy1, Faye S Taxman1.   

Abstract

This study examines the program- and individual-level factors that impact the success of drug court clients in terms of: (1) graduation; and (2) not being arrested while participating in the court program. The data consist of 848 individuals in nine drug courts. This paper discusses how different individual- and program-level factors impact the success of drug court participants. The findings suggest that individual- and program-level factors are both important in predicting program graduation and arrest during drug court participation, while controlling for participant demographics. Clients' education, drug/alcohol usage, program staffing, and clinical standards impact program graduation while criminal history, drug/alcohol usage, number of program hours offered, program staffing, and use of rewards and sanctions predict in-program arrest. Models combining both program- and individual-level factors performed better than either alone, leading to recommendations that agencies should emphasize improving program quality while targeting clients' needs to achieve greater success.

Entities:  

Keywords:  drug courts; hierarchical linear modeling; program graduation; programming; rearrest; risk need assessments

Year:  2022        PMID: 35450474     DOI: 10.1177/0306624X221086558

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol        ISSN: 0306-624X


  1 in total

1.  Assessing the reliability and validity of the Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) program tool.

Authors:  Niloofar Ramezani; Avi Bhati; Amy Murphy; Douglas Routh; Faye S Taxman
Journal:  Health Justice       Date:  2022-06-09
  1 in total

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