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Crime & Delinquency | 2004

Five-Year Outcomes of Therapeutic Community Treatment of Drug-Involved Offenders after Release from Prison

James A. Inciardi; Steven S. Martin; Clifford A. Butzin

With growing numbers of drug-involved offenders, substance abuse treatment has become a critical part of corrections. A multistage therapeutic community implemented in the Delaware correctional system has as its centerpiece a residential treatment program during work release—the transition between prison and community. An evaluation of this program followed 690 individuals. At 5 years, those who participated in the program were significantly more likely to be drug and arrest free. Furthermore, treatment graduates with or without aftercare had significantly greater probabilities of remaining both arrest free and drug free than did ano treatment comparison group in regular work release. Dropouts also were significantly more likely to be drug free, although not significantly less likely to have a new arrest than those without treatment. These data show that the implementation of such programs could bring about significant reductions in both drug use and drug-related crime.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 1996

Crack cocaine smokers who turn to drug injection: characteristics, factors associated with injection, and implications for HIV transmission

Kathleen L. Irwin; Brian R. Edlin; Sairus Faruque; H. Virginia McCoy; Carl O. Word; Yolanda Serrano; James A. Inciardi; Benjamin P. Bowser; Scott D. Holmberg

A survey of 1220 street-recruited crack cocaine smokers revealed that crack smokers may turn to drug injection to ease crack withdrawal. Crack smokers who later injected tended to smoke crack more heavily and for longer periods than those who did not inject. The initiation of injection was significantly associated with ever snorting heroin (prevalence ratio [PR] = 3.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.0-5.9) or snorting heroin specifically while smoking crack (PR = 2.3, 95% CI = 1.3-4.0), suggesting that snorted heroin use may mediate the transition to injection among crack smokers. Programs to prevent and treat crack dependence may prevent later injection and injection-related infections including HIV.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 1996

Integrating the therapeutic community and work release for drug-involved offenders: The CREST program☆

Amie L. Nielsen; Frank R. Scarpitti; James A. Inciardi

As the nations first therapeutic community (TC) and work release center for drug involved offenders, CREST combines the basic elements of both modalities into an effective agent for behavioral change. This article explores the ways in which these elements are integrated and applied, and the outcome of such treatment as determined by subsequent substance abuse and criminal activity. Clients entering the program from prison progress through several phases of counseling, group interaction, confrontation, and education before they enter the work release phase, where they gain realistic experience and can implement what they learned in the TC concerning living drug free. Follow-up data collected at 6 and 18 months after entry into the program indicate that CREST clients have significantly lower relapse and recidivism rates than a comparable comparison group. CREST has similar effects on relapse and recidivism across sexes, racial/ethnic groups, and different age categories, although length of time in treatment and whether clients graduated do impact outcome variables.


Journal of Drug Issues | 1997

Immigration and HIV among Migrant Workers in Rural Southern Florida

Norman L. Weatherby; H. Virginia McCoy; Keith V. Bletzer; Clyde B. McCoy; James A. Inciardi; Duane C. McBride; Mary Ann Forney

We studied HIV seropositivity among a targeted sample of migrant workers who used drugs, primarily crack cocaine, and their sexual partners in rural southern Florida from 1993 to 1995. We enrolled men and women who were born in the United States (n = 369) or in other countries (n = 174). Overall, 11.2% of the sample were HIV positive, including 18% of Blacks from the United States, and about 8% of non-Hispanic whites from the United States, Blacks from the Caribbean, and persons from Central or South America. No Hispanics from the United States or the Caribbean, but 3.4% of Hispanics from Mexico, were HIV positive. In logistic regression analyses, race/ethnicity, gender, and age were most highly associated with HIV seropositivity. Immigration status, current drug use, and current sexual activity were not related to HIV seropositivity. HIV prevention programs must help reduce heterosexual transmission of HIV associated with drug use both locally and where migrants travel and work.


Substance Use & Misuse | 1999

Drug use and HIV risks among migrant workers on the DelMarVa Peninsula.

James A. Inciardi; Hilary L. Surratt; Hector M. Colón; Dale D. Chitwood; James E. Rivers

Because high rates of drug use have been documented in the migrant farm worker population, the National Institute on Drug Abuse funded the Migrant Health Study to examine HIV risk behaviors among drug-using farm workers and their sexual partners. Many of these individuals were home-based in South Florida and migrated during the work season to various points along the Eastern Migratory Stream. The focus of this paper is a description of the characteristics and behaviors of the 151 respondents contacted on the DelMarVa Peninsula during 1994 and 1995. The data indicate that drug use was widespread in this population, a significant proportion were at risk for HIV infection, and 6% were HIV positive. As a result of these findings, public health agencies on the peninsula have instituted HIV education programs in those clinics utilized by both local and transient agricultural workers.


The Prison Journal | 1993

A Case Management Treatment Program for Drug-Involved Prison Releasees

Steven S. Martin; James A. Inciardi

This article considers the application of the case management model for community-based treatment of prison releasees. The case management model has been successfully applied to rehabilitation in the social work and mental health fields. The analogies to issues of building protective factors and relapse prevention suggest a direct application to the treatment of drug abusers, and the monitoring components of case management parallel many of the desired supervisory functions of parole and probation. This article reviews the rationale, potential, and few existing applications of case management approaches for criminal justice clients. It then presents findings from an ongoing outcome evaluation of a case management program for parolees. Both the positive and negative results from this study suggest that case management treatment, when mandated in the context of criminal justice supervision, shows promise in reducing relapse to drug use and recidivism.


Journal of Psychoactive Drugs | 1998

HIV Prevention Protocols: Adaptation to Evolving Trends in Drug Use

Wendee M. Wechsberg; David P. Desmond; James A. Inciardi; Carl G. Leukefeld; Linda B. Cottler; Jeffrey A. Hoffman

Applied research in HIV prevention with out-of-treatment substance abusers takes place in a constantly changing environment. Researchers must be able to identify changes in drug use and sexual risk patterns, develop and evaluate appropriate interventions to respond to those changes, and find ways to make effective use of new technologies as they are developed. An example of this process is the collaborative revision made to NIDAs Standard Intervention for HIV prevention by the final six study sites funded under the NIDA Cooperative Agreements for AIDS Community-Based Outreach and Intervention Research. To illustrate the process of responding to changes in the substance abuse environment, to advances in knowledge about risk, and to newer technologies, this article provides an overview of the history of two federally funded HIV-prevention programs for out-of-treatment substance abusers and reviews recent changes made to the Standard Intervention protocol. The rationale for the changes is discussed, and the substance abuse population in the study is described.


Journal of Drug Issues | 2001

Real and Perceived HIV Risk by Population Density: An Exploratory Examination

Carl G. Leukefeld; David Farabee; Melissia McDermeit; Michael L. Dennis; Wendee M. Wechsberg; James A. Inciardi; Hilary L. Surratt; Wilson M. Compton; Linda B. Cottler; Hugh Klein; Jeffrey A. Hoffman; David P. Desmond; Tk Logan

Little is known about HIV and its primary routes of transmission in less populated areas. The purpose of this exploratory study was to contrast the real and perceived HIV risk among out-of-treatment drug users in a multi-site sample of low-, medium-, and high-population density counties in six states and Washington, D.C. Drug users in medium density areas “perceived” their risk of acquiring HIV/AIDS as lower than those in the high-density areas. A multivariate logistic regression model found that the perceived risk could be predicted primarily as a function of lifetime HIV, lifetime STDs, needle use, having multiple sexual partners, and community population density. Because of different risk patterns and a “false” sense of risk, it is important to expand HIV risk reduction activities to include less populated areas.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2001

CROSS-CULTURAL APPROACHES TO HARM REDUCTION RESEARCH: SOME CONSIDERATIONS ON THE BRAZIL EXPERIENCE

James A. Inciardi; Hilary L. Surratt

Harm reduction initiatives for drug users comprise a range of approaches, including drug-user treatment, advocacy for changes in drug policy, needle exchange programs, bleach distribution, and broad-based interventions that focus on both safer drug use and less risky sexual behaviors. In many developing nations, harm reduction is a relatively new strategy, which focuses almost exclusively on the connections between drug use and the spread of HIV infection. In Brazil, harm reduction programs are few, and little has been documented about their scope, experience, and effectiveness. This paper reviews the status of Brazilian harm reduction initiatives in general, with a specific focus on lessons learned from the conduct of cross-national research in Rio de Janeiro. The study demonstrated the feasibility of implementing a community-based prevention program among an at-risk population of cocaine users in Brazil, and in other countries where there is little tradition of research with out-of-treatment drug users. Finally, the paper addresses aspects of the harm reduction movement that tend to hamper its progress in both developed and developing nations. [Translations are provided in the International Abstracts Section of this issue.]


Population Research and Policy Review | 1999

Introducing the female condom to drug users in Brazil

Hilary L. Surratt; James A. Inciardi

Brazil is currently the number two country in the world for reported cases of AIDS, and the rate of heterosexually acquired cases is on the rise. Moreover, because of the changing focus of the epidemic, the ratio of male to female cases dropped from 28 : 1 in 1984 to 2.7 : 1 in 1997. While womens risk of infection continues to grow, there is evidence to suggest that traditional approaches to HIV risk reduction have not effectively addressed womens special needs. Within such a setting this study sought to introduce drug-involved women to the female condom – a female-controlled method of protection from HIV. As part of a larger HIV/AIDS intervention study targeting low-income, cocaine users, the primary aim of this initiative was to assess the level of acceptability of this new device among women at high-risk for HIV infection in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. In conjunction with individual pre-test HIV prevention counseling, clients participated in a detailed education/demonstration session with the female condom. Women were asked to try the female condom with their partners and to report their experiences at two points of contact. Outcome data indicate that a sizable proportion (71.1%) of the sexually active women used the female condom during vaginal sex on one or more occasions. In addition, many women continued to use the female condom as a method of risk reduction over the three-month follow-up period. These data suggest that the female condom can have an important role in HIV prevention efforts in Brazil.

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Hilary L. Surratt

Nova Southeastern University

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Bennett W. Fletcher

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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