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Working Toward Recovery: The Interplay of Past Treatment and Economic Status in Long-Term Outcomes for Drug-Involved Offenders

NCJ Number
219934
Journal
Substance Use & Misuse Volume: 42 Issue: 7 Dated: 2007 Pages: 1089-1107
Author(s)
Daniel J. O'Connell; Tihomir N. Enev; Steven S. Martin; James A. Inciardi
Date Published
2007
Length
19 pages
Annotation
This study examined how therapeutic community-based treatment of drug user(s) during transition from prison may lower levels of substance use and increase the likelihood of a better economic outcome.
Abstract
Study findings suggest that improved well-being, as reflected by economic status, is more influential than shedding the stigma of being an addict in long-term recovery of drug addiction. Study results showed that decreased drug use led to improved economic status and that participants who spent more years in school had significantly higher incomes and better chances of being employed than their less educated counterparts. Additionally, results showed that higher economic status is positively and significantly related to self-esteem which is instrumental for long-term recovery. Data for the study were collected from 1992 through 1998 from the Delaware Department of Corrections as part of a research project funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Results were derived from 628 participants from the Key/Crest therapeutic community-based program who completed base-line and subsequent interviews and provided urine samples over a 42 month period. Tables, figure, glossary, and references

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