因暴力和非暴力犯罪而被逮捕的双重诊断患者:两年治疗结果。

Journal of Addiction Pub Date : 2016-01-01 Epub Date: 2016-03-28 DOI:10.1155/2016/6793907
Christine Timko, Andrea Finlay, Nicole R Schultz, Daniel M Blonigen
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引用次数: 7

摘要

本研究的目的是检查双重诊断患者进入治疗的逮捕史,比较具有不同治疗史和互助组和功能的组,在接受治疗和6个月、1年和2年随访时,并检查研究终点法律功能的相关因素和预测因素。在治疗开始时,9.2%的患者没有逮捕史,56.3%的患者仅因非暴力犯罪被捕,34.5%的患者因暴力犯罪被捕。在基线,暴力组使用了最多的门诊精神病治疗,并报告了较差的功能(精神病、酒精、药物、就业和家庭/社会)。两个逮捕组都比没有逮捕的组使用了更多的住院/住院治疗,并且有更多的互助小组参与。被捕组在随访中接受药物使用障碍治疗或参与互助小组的可能性更高。一般来说,所有组在随访时的功能具有可比性(基线功能控制)。在控制了基线逮捕状态后,在两年的随访中,更严重的法律问题的早期预测是更严重的心理、家庭/社会和毒品问题。研究结果表明,有暴力犯罪被捕史的双重诊断患者可能与那些有轻微犯罪史的患者取得相当的治疗结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dually Diagnosed Patients with Arrests for Violent and Nonviolent Offenses: Two-Year Treatment Outcomes.

The purpose of this study was to examine the history of arrests among dually diagnosed patients entering treatment, compare groups with different histories on use of treatment and mutual-help groups and functioning, at intake to treatment and six-month, one-year, and two-year follow-ups, and examine correlates and predictors of legal functioning at the study endpoint. At treatment intake, 9.2% of patients had no arrest history, 56.3% had been arrested for nonviolent offenses only, and 34.5% had been arrested for violent offenses. At baseline, the violent group had used the most outpatient psychiatric treatment and reported poorer functioning (psychiatric, alcohol, drug, employment, and family/social). Both arrest groups had used more inpatient/residential treatment and had more mutual-help group participation than the no-arrest group. The arrest groups had higher likelihood of substance use disorder treatment or mutual-help group participation at follow-ups. Generally, all groups were comparable on functioning at follow-ups (with baseline functioning controlled). With baseline arrest status controlled, earlier predictors of more severe legal problems at the two-year follow-up were more severe psychological, family/social, and drug problems. Findings suggest that dually diagnosed patients with a history of arrests for violent offenses may achieve comparable treatment outcomes to those of patients with milder criminal histories.

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