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Women Offenders & the Principles of RNR (Risk, Need and Responsivity) FAYE S TAXMAN, Ph.D. Department of Criminology, Law and Society Center for Advancing Correctional Excellence! GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY [email protected] www.gmuace.org RNR Simulation Tool (www.gmuace.org/tools): tx matching & gap analysis Faye S. Taxman, Ph.D. James M. Byrne, Ph.D. April Pattavina, Ph.D. Avinash Singh Bhati, Ph.D. Michael S. Caudy, Ph.D. Stephanie A. Ainsworth, M.A. Erin L. Crites, M.A. Joseph, M. Durso, B.S. Lauren Dunhaime Gina Rosch Special Acknowledgements: Bureau of Justice Assistance BJA: 2009-DG-BX-K026 Center for Substance Abuse Treatment SAMHSA: 202171 Public Welfare Foundation 6/26/2013 Special Thanks to: Ed Banks, Ph.D. Ken Robertson 2 Can’t Reduce Recidivism with --Service Gaps --Punishment-Oriented Tx Programs Need based on SUD 2400000 2200000 # Exposed to Treatment 2000000 1800000 1600000 1400000 1200000 1000000 800000 600000 524,000 400000 200000 398,000 101,000 0 No Need; SA Education Outpatient Counseling Intensive Counseling 50,000 Drug Treatment Courts 97,000 Structured Residential Tx GMU Risk, Need, Responsivity • CJ Risk: more criminal history, greater safety risks and involvement with the justice system • Needs: some needs are tied offending behavior such as antisocial cognitions, criminal “peers”, criminal personality (and then SUD, employment, leisure, families); other needs are not (mental health, housing, etc.) • Responsivity: match to programming but focus on CBT programming 6/26/2013 4 Public Health Impact Population Impact in Hypothetical Jurisdiction (N=10,000) Percent Rearrested within 3 Years 70 Standard Treatment With RNR Matching 60% 60 50 48% 40 36% 30 20 0 10 20 30 40 50 5 60 70 Percent of Population in Programming 80 90 100 Scientists, policymakers, and practitioners promote the use of the Risk, Needs, Responsivity model which is: 1. Guided by scientific findings 2. Triages resources for moderate to higher risk offenders & places less emphasis on services for lower risk offenders 3. Promotes the use of treatment matching principles 4. Integrates resource allocation, efficiency & effectiveness models 6/26/2013 But women offenders do not fit the mold 6 Silver Bullets RNR Rhetoric Science/clinical practice • Treat high risk offenders • Offer treatment in prison/jail • Needs are more important in treatment placement • Drug abuse, mental health are not “criminogenic” • Community based TX is more effective • Developmental issues are not important • Age, gender, maturity are important • CBT: the programming • Mental health affects stability • Sanctioning is important for compliance • CM and incentives are important for engaging 6/26/2013 7 • Reduce use of sanctions Criminal Justice Risk Use Actuarial Risk Measure to Prioritize for Care 6/26/2013 8 What is Risk? • Risk is the likelihood that a person will engage in future criminal behavior (recidivate) • Can be discussed as static or dynamic or both • Risk does NOT refer to dangerousness or likelihood of violence • Static risk factors have a direct correlation with criminal behavior • Historical – based on criminal history • Cannot be decreased by interventions 6/26/2013 9 CJ Risk Assessment • EBP: Risk level should drive receipt of care— moderate to high risk offenders benefit more from care • Actuarial based Models • Main Factors • Age of first arrest • Number of arrests and/or convictions • Number of failed attempts on probation (or parole) • Number of incarcerations • Number of escapes • Substance Abuse 6/26/2013 10 CJ Risk Matters…..(3 year, all offenses) Risk Level High Moderate Low 0 20 40 % Rearrested Probation 6/26/2013 Ainsworth, Crites, Caudy, & Taxman, 2011 Jail 11 60 Prison 80 100 Risk Principle in Action – High Risk 40 32 8% Recidivism Reduction 30 30 27 24 21 19 20 Change in Recidivism Rates 15 12 12 12 10 10 10 7 8 8 8 5 2 3 3 3 0 -2 -2 -6 -10 -5 -8 -10 -15 -20 -18 -14 -17 -30 -34 -40 6/26/2013 Lowenkamp & Latessa, 2005 12 13 13 22 25 25 33 34 Risk Principle in Action – Low Risk 10 8 0 0 Change in Recidivism Rates -2 -7 -7 -6 -5 -4 -4 -2 -2 1 1 1 2 3 3 -1 -4 -10 -11 -11 -11 -16 4% Recidivism Increase -15 -20 -21 -21 -21 -21 -30 -29 -29 -32 -36 -40 6/26/2013 Lowenkamp & Latessa, 2005 13 4 4 5 6 9 Risk & Other Health Needs Piquero and colleagues (2007) found that chronic offenders tend to suffer from more health problems than desisters. Using the Baltimore stratification of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project (n = 1,758 subjects), they examined the trajectories of individuals 27 to 33 years old 8+arrests in their lifetime were classified as “life-course persistent” life-course persistent offenders had higher rates of alcohol and other drug use and cigarette smoking than desisters. significant relationship between adverse health outcomes and being a life-course persistent offender. 6/26/2013 14 Women Offenders • The static risk concept—early onset, # of instances of CJ experience, prior failures—does not hold • Women are less violent, less serious offending anddo not fit the same male patterns of offending • Women are influenced by others (relationships) which poses a different dynamic risk factor • Women are moderate to lower risk on a male dominated instruments; women trailers overclassify for risk 6/26/2013 15 Dynamic Risk (Needs) 👍 👍 Target in programming to change behavior The area where CJ and Public Health organizations can address the unmet habituation and socio-psychological needs 👍 6/26/2013 Managing risky behaviors and addressing health inequities 16 Health Issues Among Adults in the Correctional System Sexually Transmitted Infection 1:2 Substance Use Disorder 1:2 Co-Occurring Disorders 1:2 Hepatitis C 1:4 Mental Health Disorder 1:2 Tuberculosis 1:5 HIV/AIDS 1:48 *Sexually transmitted infections include: HIV, AIDS, Hepatitis C, Chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis. *Correctional population numbers came from: Taxman et al. (2007), supplemented by information on federal prisoners, probationers, and parolees from the Bureau of Justice Statistics’ “Prisoners in 2007” and “Probation and Parole in 2007” (available at http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/correct.htm). 6/26/2013 *Offender health status numbers came from Cropsey, et al172013 Theoretical Criminogenic Needs 6/26/2013 • • • • Criminal personality Antisocial peers Antisocial values, orientation Prior criminal history • • • • Substance use Employment & Education Dysfunctional Families Recreational and lesure 18 Women do not fit the mold • “Criminogenic needs” as conceptualized and used in practice does not address female issues: • • • • • • • • • Substance abuse/use Mental health and suicide attempts Personal relationships (marital, significant others, partners) Family structure Dysfunctional Relationships Housing Economic Survival Physical and sexual abuse Relationship management • Fails to recognize different pathways to offending 6/26/2013 19 Women do not fit the mold • Jiang, Huang, & Hser (2013) studied 1444 offenders in diversionary offenders (Prop 36) with co-morbid drug abuse & mental health disorders: • Women: greater problem severity (family, health, psychological, sexual and physical abuse history) • Men: had greater prior criminal history • Lower education, cocaine use, arrest history were related to women recidivism (compared by young age, outpatient tx, arrest history) 6/26/2013 20 Drug of Choice Matters • Alcohol: being older, white, male, having private health insurance, being medicated for a mental health disorder, and having a criminal history of person offenses. • Cocaine: being older, black, female, attempting suicide, <high school education, living in a shelter or with relatives, being unemployed, being uninsured, being physically and sexually abused, and committing property and court offenses but not person or substance offenses. • Marijuana: being younger, black, male, never being married, and committing substance but not property or court offenses. • Opioids: being white, female, being married, higher education, being unemployed, and being medicated for a mental health disorder. Clark et al (2012) in a study of over 15,000 21 community corrections intakes 6/26/2013 Drug of Choice Matters Odds of Offending by Drug Type Marijuana 1.46 Cocaine 2.56 Crack 6.09 Heroin 3.08 0 2 4 6 Weighted Mean Effect Size (odds ratio – random effects) 6/26/2013 Bennett, Holloway, & Farrington, 2008 22 8 Responsivity 👍 👍 👍 6/26/2013 Gender specific programming Economic and financial needs Managing risky behaviors and addressing health inequities 23 What Has Been Tried: CJ Interventions to Change Offending Behaviors? • • • • Intensive Supervision Boot Camp Case Management Prison/Incarceration • Case management & services provided • Diversion to residential treatment • Specified treatment programs (e.g. Break the Cycle, Seamless System, etc.) • Medication Assisted Therapies with Behavioral Therapies • Drug Treatment Courts • RNR Supervision • In-Prison Therapeutic Programs (TC) with Aftercare Red: ineffective 6/26/2013 Blue: Promising Green: Effective 24 What Has Been Tried: Clinical? • Psycho-Social Educational • Non-Directive Counseling • Directive Counseling • • • • • Motivational Interviewing Moral Reasoning Emotional Skill Development 12 Step Based Programming Medications for SUD & MH • Cognitive Behavioral (Social Skills, Behavioral Management, etc.) • Family Interventions (MST, FFT) • Therapeutic Communities (with aftercare) • Contingency Management/Token Economies 6/26/2013 25 CBT-Related Issues • Seeking Safety (CTN found no support within addiction treatment programs); unsure about punitive environment & trust issues • Thinking for a Change (deficit based—”stinking thinking”) • Addiction Treatment does not deal with: • Multidimensional • Integrated service models • Engagement in care • Relationship • Siloed programs • If processing groups will not happen, little impact on cognitive restructuring 6/26/2013 26 Relationship Model • Importance of relationships and enhancing positive relationships to help SUD women (Covington & Surrey, 1997) • Social support and skill building intervention • Skill building and protective behavior • Social support, service linkage, discharge planning • El-Bassel & colleagues (2003) communication model with negotiation and problem solving in relationships 6/26/2013 27 From the Voice of Women: Adapting Tx to Address Relationships & Risky Behaviors in Women • Drug Use: Addiction leads to Unprotected Sex • Strategy: Use sex is used as a strategy to manipulate partners • Trust: Practicing Safe Sex is not important in long term relationships • Safe Partner: HIV and other STIs were not viewed as potential consequences of risky behaviors • Invincibility: Majority said they were not concerned about contracting HIV; they just didn’t feel like it could happen to them • Self-Worth: Relationships influence the way that a women feels about herself and this influences sexual activity 28 Stanton-Tildell, eta al 2007 looking at HIV risk behaviors Better Outcomes via Tx Matching Therapeutic Community (26.6% High Need) Substance Abuse Tx (25.8% High Need) Education (63.5% High Need) 26% 55% 31% 49% 31% 53% % Reconvicted with High LSI-R Need % Reconvicted with No Needs Caudy, Outcomes: A review of Kansas 6/26/2013 et al (2011). Using Data to Examine 29 Department of Corrections. Fairfax, VA: George Mason University. Program Quality Matters • Across the tools used, most programs score < 50 or are unsatisfactory • Program quality (Implementation, Risk-Need Assessment, Orientation) related to Recidivism High Score (N=1) 22% Moderate Score (N=13) 8% Low Score (N=24) 2% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% % Difference in Recidivism 6/26/2013 30 Lowenkamp, Latessa, & Smith, 2006; see also Nesovic, 2003 25% Getting past the myths…Apply RNR to Women • Basic principles do not align with epidemiology of women in the justice system, and interventions for women • Need to focus on needs as a dynamic risk factor and use these needs to identify services • Move away from static risk • Integrate relationships and incentives into the programming • Focus on strengthening interpersonal and social skills as compared to cognitive restructuring 6/26/2013 31 CJ RISK “Criminogenic Needs” Substance Tolerance for “Harder Drugs” 3+ Criminal Lifestyle—attitudes, family, peers, personality, substance abuse Stabilizers Supportive Family Stable Employment Education > HS Diploma Stable Housing Location in non-Hot Spots 6/26/2013 Destabilizers Alcohol Abuse Drug Abuse Family Dysfunction Poor Mental Health Status Employment-Related Issues Literacy Related Problems Housing Instability Location in Hot Spots Gender 32& Age 6/26/2013 34 RNR Program Level Targets • Target = Primary intervention focus • Placement based on primary and secondary needs ▫ Step-down model 6/26/2013 LEVEL A • Dependence on Criminogenic Drugs LEVEL B • Criminal Thinking/Cognitive Restructuring LEVEL C • Self-Improvement LEVEL D • Social/Interpersonal Skills LEVEL E • Life Skills (Employment, Education, etc.) LEVEL F • Punishment Only 35 Scoring The Program Tool • Essential features and targets drive program level classification • 6 scoring areas • • • • • • 6/26/2013 Risk principle (15pts) Need principle (15pts) Responsivity principle (15pts) Implementation (25pts) Dosage (20pts) Additional features (10pts) 36 • Here’s the link: www.gmuace .org/tools 6/26/2013 37 6/26/2013 38 6/26/2013 39 Gap Analysis 80% 60% 39% 40% 27% 20% 26% 38% 21% 22% 23% 4% 0% Level A 6/26/2013 Level B Level C % Recommended Level D Level E % Currently in Program 40 Level F 6/26/2013 41 Components of the Model • Static Risk ▫ Use of validated risk assessment tool required ▫ High and moderate risk prioritized • Demographics ▫ Age and gender weighted heavily • Criminogenic Needs ▫ Drug dependence (hard drugs) ▫ 3 or more criminogenic needs • Stabilizers and Destabilizers ▫ Clinically-relevant factors 6/26/2013 42 6/26/2013 43 $6.4 B= + A country 6/26/2013 + 300 new schools 44 Cleveland Browns Thank you www.gmuace.org/tools 45