| Literature DB >> 35922684 |
Allyson L Dir1,2, Martha Tillson3, Matthew C Aalsma2,4, Michele Staton5, Monte Staton6, Dennis Watson7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Individuals with substance use disorders (SUD), particularly opioid use disorder (OUD), who are criminal justice-involved are a particularly vulnerable population that has been adversely affected by COVID-19 due to impacts of the pandemic on both the criminal justice and treatment systems. The manuscript presents qualitative data and findings exploring issues related to SUD/OUD treatment among individuals involved in the justice system and the impacts of COVID-19 on these service systems. Qualitative data were collected separately by teams from three different research hubs/sites in Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky; at each hub, data were collected from justice system personnel (n = 17) and community-level SUD/OUD providers (n = 21). Codes from two hubs were reviewed and merged to develop the cross-hub coding list. The combined codes were used deductively to analyze the third hub's data, and higher-level themes were then developed across all the hubs' data.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Decarceration; Opioid use disorder; Substance use disorder; Telehealth; Telejustice
Year: 2022 PMID: 35922684 PMCID: PMC9351174 DOI: 10.1186/s40352-022-00184-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Justice ISSN: 2194-7899
Overview of sites and data collected
| Site | Data collection time | Justice system staff (n) | Jail staff (n) | MSUD/OUD provider (n) | Method of sampling | Topics addressed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Illinois | June 2020 | 0 | 2 | 3 | Recruited from justice & service providers project partners | Challenges, responses/adaptations, and successes related to serving people who are justice-involved and have OUD |
| Indiana | April–September 2020 | 6 | 0 | 13 | Recruited from list of individuals familiar with the research project supplied by juvenile justice administrators | Justice and treatment system response to the pandemic, impact on usual practices, including challenges, adaptations, &and successes to serving youth involved in juvenile justice and seeking treatment for substance use. |
| Kentucky | June–July 2020 | 6 | 3 | 5 | Recruited from justice & service provider project partners | Impact of COVID-19 on usual practices, use of telehealth, unique challenges, needed adaptations, & and successes in serving justice-involved women with a history of opioid use. |
Cross site comparison of specific details related pertaining to each identified themes
| How theme was observed at each site | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Theme | Illinois | Indiana | Kentucky |
| 1. Criminal justice response and impact | |||
| 1a. Releases, arrests, & census impact | - Accommodate social distancing through reduced census by limiting arrests, releasing minor offenders, & placing on community supervision | -Accommodate social distancing through reduced census by not processing juvenile offenders as arrests | -Accommodate social distancing through reduced census by limiting arrests, releasing minor offenders, & placing on community supervision -Stop transfers between facilities to help pandemic procedure implementation |
| 1b. Impact on pre-release planning & linkage to services | -Rapid release prevents appropriate community MOUD linkage -COVID-19 info prioritized over MOUD education -Some who were COVID-19 positive released before obtaining results | -Rapid release hinders community service linkage -Limiting visitors for social distancing prevents involving family & friends in treatment & recovery planning -Difficulties addressing COVID-19 concerns of those being released | |
| 2. Community providers treatment referral & intake changes | -Limiting of new intakes -Quarantine requirements make placements difficult | -Limiting of new intakes, with some providers completely stopping intakes | -Limiting of new intakes -Some stopped taking jail referrals because high jail COVID-19 rates -Lower census implemented to facilitate social distancing -Length of some residential treatment expanded |
| 3. Implementation of telehealth & telejustice | |||
| 3a. Telehealth | -Treatment system largely benefited from telehealth implementation -Client access to necessary technology noted as barrier | -Treatment system largely benefited from telehealth implementation -Client access to necessary technology noted as barrier -Drawbacks when working with high-risk situations | -Treatment system largely benefited from telehealth implementation -Client access to necessary technology noted as barrier -Older clients not always as comfortable with telehealth |
| 3b. Telejustice | -Telejustice implemented for court hearings | -Telejustice implemented for justice system intakes, court hearings | -Telejustice implemented for court hearings, community supervision - Telejustice noted as a benefit for clients reporting on supervision |