henry j. steadman, ph.d. saks institute spring symposium april 11, 2013

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Reducing the Involvement of Persons With Mental Illness & Co-Occurring Disorders in the Criminal Justice System Through Jail Diversion Programs Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium April 11, 2013

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Reducing the Involvement of Persons With Mental Illness & Co-Occurring Disorders in the Criminal Justice System Through Jail Diversion Programs. Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium April 11, 2013. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Reducing the Involvement of Persons With Mental Illness & Co-Occurring

Disorders in the Criminal Justice System Through Jail Diversion Programs

Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D.Saks Institute Spring Symposium

April 11, 2013

Page 2: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

On June 30, 2005, approximately 7 million people were under correctional supervision in the U.S.

Jail: 747,529

Prison: 1,446,269

Probation: 4,162,536

Parole: 784,408

Page 3: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

In 2005, there were 13 million bookings into U.S. jails.

Page 4: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

PRA/CSG Jail Prevalence Study

Sites: 5 jails (2 – MD; 3 – NY)

Time: 2002 and 2006

Serious Mental Illness: Depression/Bi-Polar/Schophrenia/Schizo-Affective/Schizophreniform/Brief Psychotics/Delusional/Psychosis NOS

Prevalence: Last month

Prevalence Rates: Men – 14.5%Women – 31%

Steadman, H.J., Osher, F., Robbins, P., Case, B., Samuels, S. (2009). Prevalence of serious mental illness among jail inmates. Psychiatric Services 60, 761-765.

Page 5: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Admission to U.S. Jails (2005)

13 million

Proportion of Jail Inmates With Severe Mental Disorder

Men = 14.5%Women = 31.0%

Number of Annual Admissions to U.S. Jails with Severe Mental Disorder

2.1 million

Page 6: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Prevalence of Current Substance Abuse Among Jail Detainees with Severe Mental Disorders

Males Females

Disorder Alcohol Abuse/ Dependence

Drug Abuse/ Dependence

Alcohol Abuse/ Dependence

Drug Abuse/ Dependence

Schizophrenia 59% 42% 56% 60%

Major Depression 56% 26% 37% 57%

Mania 33% 24% 39% 64%

Any Severe Disorder

58% 33% 40% 60%

Detainees with severe mental disorder plus either alcohol or drug abuse/dependence

= 72% = 72%

Adapted from: Abram, K.M. and Teplin, L.A. “Co-Occurring Disorders Among Mentally Ill Jail Detainees: Implications for Public Policy.” American Psychologist, 46(10):1036-1045, 1991 and Teplin, L.A. “Personal Communication.”

Policy Research Associates, Inc. 6/17/98

Page 7: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

CMHS TCE JD: 14 Sites Traumatic Experiences (n=546)

Lifetime Past 12 Months

F M F M

Physical 93.2% 89.8% 67.4% 58.6%

Sexual 77.1% 34.7% 32.1% 27.5%

Page 8: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Repeated Cycles

INCARCERATION

ARREST

PrivateHome

GroupResidence

ShelterStreet

S.A.ResidentialTreatment

MentalHealthInpatient

Page 9: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

“Treatment-Resistant” Clients

OR

“Client-Resistant” Services

Page 10: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

CO

MM

UN

ITY

Intercept 1Law enforcement

911

Law

Enf

orce

men

t

Intercept 2Initial detention / Initial court hearings

Initi

al D

eten

tion

Firs

t App

eara

nce

Cou

rtArrest

Intercept 3Jails / Courts

Jail

Spec

ialty

Cou

rt

Dis

posi

tiona

l Cou

rt

Intercept 4Reentry

Pris

on/

Ree

ntry

Jail

Re-

entr

y

Paro

le

CO

MM

UN

ITYIntercept 5Community corrections

Prob

atio

n

Violation

Violation

Page 11: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Diversion = avoiding or radically reducing jail time by using community-based treatment as an alternative.

Page 12: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

“Diversion”Criminal Justice → Not filing or dropping

charges (ATI)

Mental Health → Not filingCondition of bailDeferred prosecution

(stipulate to police report)Deferred sentencingCondition of probation

Page 13: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Diversion

Reduce recidivism

Reduce violence

Reduce jail days

Reduce costs

Public’s Expectations

Page 14: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Diversion Logic Model

Identify and Enroll People in Target Group

Linkage Comprehensive/ Appropriate Community-Based Services

Improved Mental Health /Individual Outcomes

Improved Public Safety Outcomes

Stage 1 Stage 2

Diversion

Stage 3

Page 15: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Mental Health Diversion Options

Pre-Booking – Police-Based

Post-Booking – Court-Based

– Jail-Based

– Community Corrections-Based

Page 16: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Dispositions of Cases Handled by Three Types of Police Response at Three Sites

Disposition Birmingham (N=100)

Knoxville (N=100)

Memphis (N=100)

Taken to treatment location 20 42 75

Situation resolved on the scene

64 17 23

Referred to treatment 3 36 0

Arrested 13 5 2

Page 17: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Las Vegas CIT Call Resolution*

485 (74%) Hospitalization

344 (71%) Involuntary

25 (18%) Onsite resolution

6 (4%) Arrest

* Skeem, J., Bibeau, L. (2008). How does violence potential relate to crisis intervention team responses to emergencies? Psychiatric Services 59, 201-204.

Page 18: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

CO

MM

UN

ITY

Intercept 1Law enforcement

911

Law

Enf

orce

men

t

Intercept 2Initial detention / Initial court hearings

Initi

al D

eten

tion

Firs

t App

eara

nce

Cou

rtArrest

Intercept 3Jails / Courts

Jail

Spec

ialty

Cou

rt

Dis

posi

tiona

l Cou

rt

Intercept 4Reentry

Pris

on/

Ree

ntry

Jail

Re-

entr

y

Paro

le

CO

MM

UN

ITYIntercept 5Community corrections

Prob

atio

n

Violation

Violation

Page 19: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Rikers Island 2008 Bail Statistics(N=48,000)

No Mental Illness

Mental Illness

Make Bail 21% 12%

Days to Make Bail 9 48

Council of State Governments March, 2013

Page 20: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Rikers Island Average 2008 Length of Stay*(N=48,000)

Council of State Governments March, 2013

No Identified Mental Illness – 61 Days

Identified Mental Illness – 112 Days

* of detainees staying > 3 days

Page 21: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

CO

MM

UN

ITY

Intercept 1Law enforcement

911

Law

Enf

orce

men

t

Intercept 2Initial detention / Initial court hearings

Initi

al D

eten

tion

Firs

t App

eara

nce

Cou

rtArrest

Intercept 3Jails / Courts

Jail

Spec

ialty

Cou

rt

Dis

posi

tiona

l Cou

rt

Intercept 4Reentry

Pris

on/

Ree

ntry

Jail

Re-

entr

y

Paro

le

CO

MM

UN

ITYIntercept 5Community corrections

Prob

atio

n

Violation

Violation

Page 22: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Nathaniel Project (NYC) N=53

Prior Year Current Year

Number of Arrests

101 7

Misd. 35 5

Felonies 66 2

Page 23: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

SAMHSA KDA (N=1,185)

Diverted Non-Diverted

Community days 303 245

# Arrests 1.03 1.20

Arrests/mo. .11 .15

Page 24: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

CMHS TCE JD: 14 SitesChanges in Arrests and Jail Days

Pre-Enrollment(1 year)

Post-Enrollment(1 year)

n % n %

Any Arrests 579 100.0 293 50.6

Arrests (Mean) 2.3 1.0

Violent Arrests (Mean) .23 .1

Jail Days (Mean) 49 33

Page 25: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Annualized Number of Arrests – 3 MHCs

Pre 18 Months

Post 18 Months

% Reduction

MHC Mean(N)

2.2(436)

1.4(436)

37%

TAU Mean(N)

2.6(597)

2.0(586)

23%

Page 26: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Total Incarceration Days Pre and Post 18 Months – 3 MHCs

MHCNEW Pre 18 Months

Post 18 Months

% Increase

MHC Mean(N)

75(436)

84(436)

12%

TAU Mean(N)

75(597)

152(597)

101%

Page 27: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Diversion Logic Model

Identify and Enroll People in Target Group

Linkage Comprehensive/ Appropriate Community-Based Services

Improved Mental Health /Individual Outcomes

Improved Public Safety Outcomes

Stage 1 Stage 2

Diversion

Stage 3

Page 28: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Drug & Alcohol UseNumber Cases

Reporting Use

Percent of Cases

Reporting Use

Mean Number

of Days of Use

Median Number

of Days of Use

Any alcohol -Last 30 Days

Baseline 576 59.1% 13.1 8

6 Months 169 28.4% 5.8 3

12 Months 105 30.1% 6.6 3

Alcohol to Intoxication -Last 30 Days

Baseline 372 38.2% 12.9 8

6 Months 76 12.8% 5.2 2

12 Months 45 12.9% 7.3 4

Illegal drugs - Last 30 Days

Baseline 568 58.3% 17.8 20

6 Months 101 17.0% 9.5 5

12 Months 55 15.7% 10.0 5

Page 29: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Daily Living/Role Functioning Scale

NMean Score

(Range: 0 to 4)1Mean Difference From Baseline 2

Baseline 977 2.01 --

6 Months 594 1.31 -0.70

12 Months 349 1.17 -0.84

1 – Where 0 = No Difficulty and 4 = Extreme Difficulty2 – Calculations based on those individuals having both interviews completed

Page 30: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Colorado Symptom Index (CSI)

NMean Score

(Range: 0 to 60)1Mean Difference From Baseline 2

Baseline 968 31.5 --

6 Months 590 22.3 -9.2

12 Months 346 21.4 -10.1

1 – Where 0 = Low Symptoms/High Well-Being and 60 = High Symptom/Low Well-Being2 – Calculations based on those individuals having both interviews completed

Page 31: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Year-by-Year CJ Cost

1 2 3 4 5 60

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

9000

10000

MHC TAU

Page 32: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Year-by-Year Tx Cost

1 2 3 4 5 60

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

9000

10000

MHC TAU

Page 33: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Year-by-Year Total Cost

1 2 3 4 5 60

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

14000

16000

18000

20000

MHC TAU

Page 34: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Is Criminalization An Important Public Policy Concept?

Macro View Transinstitutionalization

% Detainees with MI Different

Micro View Individual more likely in jail than in community-

based treatment

Page 35: Henry J. Steadman, Ph.D. Saks Institute Spring Symposium  April 11, 2013

Reduce Involvement

Minimize Inappropriate Penetration

More Useful Concepts