Short-Term Outcomes for Opiate and Crack Users Accessing Treatment: The Effects of Criminal Justice Referral and Crack Use
BACKGROUND/AIMS:
The
English drug treatment population doubled in size between 1998 and 2008,
increasingly characterised by crack cocaine use and criminal justice system
(CJS) referral. We assessed short-term (median 3.5 month) behaviour changes
following participation in drug treatment and the moderating effect of CJS
referral/crack use.
METHODS:
Opiate
and/or crack cocaine users (n
= 1,267) were recruited from 342 agencies. Outcome effects were assessed via
interaction term regression, clustered at participant level, controlling for
client characteristics. Treatment retention effects were tested via Cox
proportional hazard models.
RESULTS:
Statistically
significant improvements in health, drug use and offensive behaviour were
observed (e.g. heroin use
from 87 to 51%, acquisitive offending from 47 to 23%). Referral route was not
associated with variation in outcomes. Crack use at baseline was associated
with a greater chance of non-fatal overdose at follow-up but a greater reduction in offending income (p = 0.002, 95% CI
£104-£419).
CONCLUSION:
Despite
changes in the English drug treatment population, equivalent short-term
improvements in client behaviour were observed a decade earlier. Outcomes for
CJS-referred clients were comparable to non-CJS. Crack use at treatment entry
offered some scope for greater improvements in offending but may be a barrier
to cessation of mortality-associated risky behaviour.
- 1Centre for Epidemiology, Institute of Population Health, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
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