Title: Investing in Rational System Change
1Investing in Rational System Change
- Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D.
- Orlando, FL
- October 3, 2007
2- In 2005, there were 14 million bookings into U.S.
jails.
3- On June 30, 2005, approximately 7 million people
were under correctional supervision in the U.S. - Jail 747,529
- Prison 1,446,269
- Probation 4,162,536
- Parole 784,408
4Two-Week Prevalence of Severe Mental Disorder
Among the General Population and Jail Detainees
National GAINS Center. (2002). The Prevalence of
Mental Illness and Co-Occurring Substance Use
Disorder in Jails. Delmar, NY National GAINS
Center.
5Admission to U.S. Jails (2005)14 million
Proportion of Jail Inmates With Severe Mental
DisorderMen 6.4Women 12.2
Number of Annual Admissions to U.S. Jails with
Severe Mental Disorder1,112,000
616 of State Prisoners Identified as Mentally Ill
- Inmates were identified as mentally ill if they
met one of the two following criteria - the inmate reported an overnight stay in a mental
hospital or treatment program - OR
- the inmate reported a current mental or emotional
condition - Ditton, P.M. (1999). Mental Health and Treatment
in Inmates and Probationers. Washington, DC U.S.
Department of Justice, Office of Justice
Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics.
7Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report.
September 2006
8Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report.
September 2006
9Prevalence of Current Substance Abuse Among Jail
Detainees with Severe Mental Disorders
Detainees with severe mental disorder plus either
alcohol or drug abuse/dependence
72
72
Adapted from Abram, K.M. and Teplin, L.A.
Co-Occurring Disorders Among Mentally Ill Jail
Detainees Implications for Public Policy.
American Psychologist, 46(10)1036-1045, 1991 and
Teplin, L.A. Personal Communication. Policy
Research Associates, Inc. 6/17/98
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11Treatment-Resistant Clients
OR
Client-Resistant Services
12Basic Goals
- Keep people out who do not need to be there
- Provide constitutionally adequate services
- Link people to services to keep them from coming
back (because of mental illness)
13Sequential Intercept Model
Sequential - People move through the criminal
justice system in predictable ways
- Intercept - Examine this flow and look for ways
to intercept persons with mental illness and
often co-occurring disorders to ensure - Prompt access to treatment
- Opportunities for diversion
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19Sequential Intercept Model
20- Diversion avoiding or radically reducing jail
time by using community-based treatment as an
alternative.
21Diversion
22Mentally Ill Jail Detainees
Eligible
?
23Diversion Basic Tasks
- Know who you Eligibility Criteria
- are looking for
- Find them Screen/Assess
- Engage them Services Plan
- Cut a deal Negotiate the terms and conditions
- Make it stick Linkage
24Publics Expectations
Reduce recidivism
Reduce violence
Diversion
Reduce jail days
Reduce costs
25Diversion Logic Model
26Mental Health Diversion Options
- Pre-Booking
- Police-Based
- Post-Booking
- Court-Based
- Jail-Based
27Some Common Pitfalls
- Missing key people in planning
- Vague criteria for target group
- Overestimating size of target group
- Overly ambitious goals
- From vs. To
- Overreliance on the ACT EBP