Criminal legal penalties, substance use, and overdose: a concept mapping study examining Colorado's criminal legal penalties.

Katherine LeMasters, Samantha K Nall, Cole Jurecka, Betsy Craft, Paul J Christine, Ryan Goodman, Jessie Henderson, Robert Haywood-James, Angela Williams, Grace Wittner, Joshua A Barocas
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Abstract

Background: In the USA, many states, including Colorado, have increased criminal penalties for illicit opioid possession, which may alter overdose risk. We aimed to evaluate the relationship between Colorado's increased drug-related criminal legal penalties, risk of overdose, and substance use patterns.

Methods: We used concept mapping - a mixed-methods approach used to develop a conceptual understanding of an issue from a community lens - to engage with people with living and/or lived experience with the criminal legal system, substance use, and/or overdose, their loved ones, and service providers. In facilitated discussion, we used the prompt: "Do you see overdose and substance use, in Colorado, being impacted by an individual's involvement with the criminal legal system?" Participants - recruited from community-based organizations - identified, rated, sorted, and categorized factors affecting criminal legal involvement, substance use, and/or overdose in their community. We used groupwisdom to develop concept maps and to analyze findings.

Results: Twenty-four individuals (ages 18-70) participated; most had living and/or lived experience. Participants identified 100 distinct factors, which were sorted into 9 clusters: societal impacts of criminal legal involvement, lifesaving benefits to decreased criminal legal penalties, environmental barriers of criminal legal involvement, structural barriers to recovery services, essential culturally aware community-based services, strategic allocation of funding, strategies to improve law enforcement's impact, changing policies to keep law enforcement accountable and better educate law enforcement on community culture, and community issues with law enforcement to prioritize. Of the 40 most influential and common factors, most related to structural impacts of criminal legal involvement and barriers to recovery (e.g., long waitlists, job loss).

Conclusions: Using concept mapping, we worked with community members to identify and prioritize factors associated with substance use and overdose amidst increasing drug-related criminal legal penalties. These insights (e.g., law enforcement's role should be acting as a bridge to mental health and recovery services) are critical for policymakers and service providers, as they speak to the need for investing in re-entry services, harm reduction services, and co-responder models for behavioral health crises.

刑事法律处罚,物质使用和过量:一项考察科罗拉多州刑事法律处罚的概念图研究。
背景:在美国,包括科罗拉多州在内的许多州都增加了对非法持有阿片类药物的刑事处罚,这可能会改变过量服用的风险。我们的目的是评估科罗拉多州增加的与毒品有关的刑事法律处罚、过量风险和药物使用模式之间的关系。方法:我们使用概念映射-一种用于从社区角度对问题进行概念性理解的混合方法方法-与生活和/或生活经验与刑事法律制度,物质使用和/或过量的人,他们的亲人和服务提供者联系。在方便的讨论中,我们使用了这样一个提示:“你认为科罗拉多州的吸毒过量和药物使用是否受到个人参与刑事法律体系的影响?”参与者——从社区组织招募——确定、评级、分类和分类影响其社区刑事法律介入、物质使用和/或过量使用的因素。我们使用群体智慧来绘制概念图并分析发现。结果:24人(18-70岁)参与;大多数人都有生活和/或生活经验。参与者确定了100个不同的因素,并将其分为9类:刑事法律介入的社会影响、减少刑事法律处罚带来的挽救生命的好处、刑事法律介入的环境障碍、康复服务的结构性障碍、具有重要文化意识的社区服务、资金的战略性分配、提高执法影响的战略、改变政策以使执法部门负责并更好地教育执法人员了解社区文化;以及执法部门要优先考虑的社区问题。在40个最具影响力和最常见的因素中,大多数与刑事法律介入的结构性影响和恢复障碍(例如,等候名单过长、失业)有关。结论:利用概念图,我们与社区成员合作,在与毒品相关的刑事法律处罚日益增加的情况下,确定并优先考虑与药物使用和过量相关的因素。这些见解(例如,执法部门的作用应作为心理健康和康复服务的桥梁)对政策制定者和服务提供者至关重要,因为它们说明需要投资于重返社会服务、减少伤害服务和行为健康危机的共同应对模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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