2013
DOI: 10.1177/0193841x13487536
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Do Specialty Courts Achieve Better Outcomes for Children in Foster Care Than General Courts?

Abstract: Objective: This study assessed the effects of unified family and drug treatment courts (DTCs) on the resolution of cases involving foster care children and the resulting effects on school performance. Method: The first analytic step was to assess the impacts of presence of unified and DTCs in North Carolina counties on time children spent in foster care and the type of placement at exit from foster care. In the second step, the same data on foster care placements were merged with school records for youth in Gr… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In the criminal justice system, court program completion can result in clearing of the associated criminal charge and/or avoidance of incarceration 3 . In the civil court system, court program completion is predictive of reunification between parents and children who were removed due to parental drug use 4 , 32 . Therefore, our study suggests that some court participants may be required to stop MOUD to avoid incarceration/criminal charges or reunite with their children, both of which are problematic from ethical and public health standpoints.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the criminal justice system, court program completion can result in clearing of the associated criminal charge and/or avoidance of incarceration 3 . In the civil court system, court program completion is predictive of reunification between parents and children who were removed due to parental drug use 4 , 32 . Therefore, our study suggests that some court participants may be required to stop MOUD to avoid incarceration/criminal charges or reunite with their children, both of which are problematic from ethical and public health standpoints.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…3 In the civil court system, court program completion is predictive of reunification between parents and children who were removed due to parental drug use. 4,32 Therefore, our study suggests that some court participants may be required to stop MOUD to avoid incarceration/criminal charges or reunite with their children, both of which are problematic from ethical and public health standpoints. Early or medically arbitrary discontinuation of MOUD-based treatment is contrary to the standard of care for individuals with OUD 33 and could result in adverse outcomes for participants, including relapse and overdose.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Future research should explore these differences. Nevertheless, given that criminal problem-solving court staff and dependency court staff make decisions as teams, 8,[22][23][24] we recommend that educational interventions about MOUD target all roles. Based on the importance of MOUD opinions of treatment providers, according to our survey results, we also strongly recommend that education target all external treatment providers with whom courts collaborate.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kentucky has a unified court system in that separate courts practicing in individual jurisdictions are centrally administered. Across the country some court systems handle all family law matters under a family court, whose main goal is to consolidate all issues involving a family into one place (Sloan et al., ). Family courts cover an array of issues that include child custody, divorce, equitable division of property, and juvenile delinquency charges (Domitrovich, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Family courts cover an array of issues that include child custody, divorce, equitable division of property, and juvenile delinquency charges (Domitrovich, ). A typical case heard in such courts involves children who are removed from the home and placed in foster care (Sloan et al., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%