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Long Road to Treatment: Models of Screening and Admission Into Drug Courts

NCJ Number
237399
Journal
Criminal Justice and Behavior Volume: 38 Issue: 12 Dated: December 2011 Pages: 1222-1243
Author(s)
Steven Belenko; Nicole Fabrikant; Nancy Wolff
Date Published
December 2011
Length
22 pages
Annotation
This study examined the screening and admissions process of drug courts.
Abstract
Drug courts are quite popular but admit relatively small percentages of eligible offenders. Some participants may also not be appropriate for available treatment, further affecting the validity of evaluation findings. The authors used qualitative data from six representative drug courts to examine screening and admission processes in detail. Two distinct screening models were identified: (a) the prosecutor as key initial gatekeeper in diversion drug courts and (b) drug court staff as gatekeeper in postplea courts. Each had three stages: initial eligibility screening using formal eligibility criteria, evidence-based eligibility assessment incorporating clinical assessments and other screening, and judicial and client approval. Drug court admission is complex, with many decision points, gatekeepers, formal and informal criteria, and opportunities for rejection or refusal. The findings help explain drug courts' low population penetration and suggest the importance of documenting admission processes to identify selection effects in evaluations and inform strategies to improve targeting and admissions. (Published Abstract)