The costs of crime and the benefits of substance abuse treatment for pregnant women

Although many pregnant, drug-dependent women report extensive criminal justice involvement, few studies have examined reductions in crime as an outcome of substance abuse treatment programs for pregnant women. This is unfortunate, because maternal criminal involvement can have serious health and cos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of substance abuse treatment 2000-12, Vol.19 (4), p.445-458
Hauptverfasser: Daley, Marilyn, Argeriou, Milton, McCarty, Dennis, Callahan, James J., Shepard, Donald S., Williams, Carol N.
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container_end_page 458
container_issue 4
container_start_page 445
container_title Journal of substance abuse treatment
container_volume 19
creator Daley, Marilyn
Argeriou, Milton
McCarty, Dennis
Callahan, James J.
Shepard, Donald S.
Williams, Carol N.
description Although many pregnant, drug-dependent women report extensive criminal justice involvement, few studies have examined reductions in crime as an outcome of substance abuse treatment programs for pregnant women. This is unfortunate, because maternal criminal involvement can have serious health and cost implications for the unborn child, the mother and society. Using the Addiction Severity Index, differences in pre- and posttreatment criminal involvement were measured for a sample of 439 pregnant women who entered publicly funded treatment programs in Massachusetts between 1992 and 1997. Accepted cost of illness methods were supplemented with information from the Bureau of Justice Statistics to estimate the costs and benefits of five treatment modalities: detoxification only (used as a minimal treatment comparison group), methadone only, residential only, outpatient only, and residential/outpatient combined. Projected to a year, the net benefits (avoided costs of crime net of treatment costs) ranged from US$32,772 for residential only to US$3,072 for detoxification. Although all five modalities paid for themselves by reducing criminal activities, multivariate regressions controlling for baseline differences between the groups showed that reductions in crime and related costs were significantly greater for women in the two residential programs. The study provides economic justification for the continuation and possible expansion of residential substance abuse treatment programs for criminally involved pregnant women.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adult
Biological and medical sciences
Cost benefit analysis
Crime
Crime Prevention
Criminality
Desintoxication. Drug withdrawal
Drug Addiction
Drug treatment
Female
Female Offenders
Health Care Costs
Humans
Massachusetts
Medical sciences
Multivariate Analysis
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Complications - psychology
Pregnancy Complications - therapy
Pregnant women
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Substance abuse treatment
Substance-Related Disorders - psychology
Substance-Related Disorders - therapy
Treatment Methods
Treatment Outcomes
Treatment Programs
Treatments
Women
title The costs of crime and the benefits of substance abuse treatment for pregnant women
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