This experimental pilot study compared post-release outcomes for 115 women who participated in prison-based substance abuse treatment. Women were randomized to a gender-responsive treatment (GRT) program using manualized curricula (Helping Women Recover and Beyond Trauma) or a standard prison-based therapeutic community (TC). Data were collected from the participants at prison program entry and 6 and 12 months after release. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were conducted. Results indicate that both groups improved in psychological well-being; however, GRT participants had greater reductions in drug use, were more likely to remain in residential aftercare longer (2.6 months vs. 1.8 months, p < .05), and were less likely to have been reincarcerated within 12 months after parole (31% vs. 45%, respectively; a 67% reduction in odds for the experimental group, p < .05). Findings show the beneficial effects of treatment components oriented toward women's needs and support the integration of GRT in prison programs for women.
With longitudinal data from a sample of adult male drug offenders, this study tested 4 aspects of social bonding (attachment, involvement, religious commitment, and moral belief) and association with substance-using peers as outcomes of low self-control and as mediators of the relationship between low self-control and drug use. Low self-control was negatively related to social bonds and positively related to drug use and association with substance-using peers. The relationship between low self-control and drug use was fully mediated by moral belief and association with substance-using peers. These results support the utility of integrating self-control and social bonding perspectives on deviance.
This study compared factors that predict treatment outcomes in men and women randomly assigned to two therapeutic communities differing primarily in length of inpatient and outpatient treatment. Based on the prior research literature comparing treatment outcomes of men and women, we formulated the following research question: Do factors that predict drug use at follow-up, postdischarge arrest, and employment at follow-up differ for men and women? Self-reports and objective measures of criminal activity and substance abuse were collected at pre- and posttreatment interviews. Separate regression analyses were conducted for men and women for each of the three outcome variables. The results showed that the predictors of outcome for men and women were similar. Clients who completed the 12-month treatment programs had better outcomes regardless of gender. Men and women who completed treatment were characterized at follow-up by substantial reductions in drug use and arrests and by increased employment. Results further suggested that the longer residential treatment program had a particularly beneficial impact on women. Number of prior arrests was also associated with postdischarge outcomes for women. Women with more arrests at admission were more likely to have a postdischarge arrest and less likely to be employed at follow-up. This finding provides invaluable information about which women may be at greater risk for relapse and in need of additional services. We conclude that completion of treatment is the key predictor of treatment outcomes for both men and women.
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