Epidemics in the Justice System: Alcohol and Rural Courts - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Epidemics in the Justice System: Alcohol and Rural Courts

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Title: Epidemics in the Justice System: Alcohol and Rural Courts


1
Epidemics in the Justice System Alcohol and
Rural Courts
  • Linda L. Chezem, JD
  • Purdue University
  • Indiana Alcohol Research Center at
  • Indiana University School of Medicine

2
Public Health
  • United States 2001
  • Alcohol Harmful Effects

3
Alcohol Attributable Death
4
Past-Year DSM-IV Alcohol Dependence Among
12-to-17 Year-Olds by Sex, Race-Ethnicity and
Urbanicity
5
Past-Year Binge Drinkers Among 12-to-17 Year-Olds
by Sex, Race-Ethnicity and Urbanicity
6
Past-Year Drinkers Among 12-to-17 Year-Olds by
Sex, Race-Ethnicity and Urbanicity
7
Public Health Core Functions
  • Assessment
  • Surveillance (how many alcohol related cases in
    the courts?)
  • Detection of alcohol use in underage or other at
    risk population
  • Policy Development
  • Inform, educate, and empower people about alcohol
    in the justice system and the health issues
  • Mobilize community partnerships and action to
    identify and solve health problems (e.g.,
    convening and facilitating community groups to
    promote health about alcohol).

8
Assurance (about alcohol and health)
  • Enforce alcohol laws and regulations that protect
    health and ensure safety.
  • Evaluate effectiveness, accessibility, and
    quality of personal and population-based health
    services (e.g., continuous evaluation of public
    alcohol health programs).
  • Research for new insights and innovative
    solutions to alcohol problems (e.g., links with
    academic institutions and capacity for
    epidemiologic and economic analyses). 
  • Evaluate impact of alcohol response in the
    justice system

9
First Step
  • Articulate the public health impact of alcohol.
  • Determine the impact of alcohol in the community.
  • Seek to better understand the public health role
    of courts when alcohol is involved.

10
Justice System
  • More than 20,000 Courts in US have jurisdiction
    over alcohol related cases.
  • Fewer than 2000 drug courts in US

Civil
Civil
Criminal
Dissolutions
Juvenile
Probate
11
Rural Courts
  • Cannot stand alone
  • "The life of the law has not been logic it has
    been experience." Oliver Wendell Holmes from The
    Common Law, 1881
  • Research that applies to rural communities is
    essential
  • Utilize
  • Help set agenda

12
All courts are alcohol courts.
  • Courts are the RURAL Community Agents for
    INTERVENTION AND TREATMENT.
  • Should people have to go to court for alcohol
    health services?
  • Do rural populations have geographical and
    economic access to honest EVIDENCE BASED
    TREATMENT?

13
Can Drug Courts Go Country ?
  • Debatable (approximately 1700 courts)
  • GAO report
  • Only as good as the treatment provider?
  • Not easily transportable
  • Limited number of judges
  • Extremely limited justice resources
  • Evidence based assessment and treatment services
  • Community dynamics

14
Alcohol fuels the justice system.
  • Alcohol
  • Alcohol plus other drugs
  • Alcohol plus mental illness
  • All of the above add up to an overwhelming
    impact on justice.

15
What Research is Rural?
  • Not enough studies are conducted in rural
    communities.
  • Federal research dollars and foundation grants do
    not adequately include rural targets.
  • Rural and non urban communities are invisible in
    much research.
  • CAN community based urban research apply to
    rural?

16
Alcohol Law
  • Enforcing Underage Drinking Laws
  • Prosecution of under 21 for possession or
    consumption of alcohol.
  • Under 18 go to juvenile court.
  • Over 21 go to adult court.

17
Underage Drinking
  • Alcohol is the most commonly used drug by
    children and adolescents.
  • Teens who use alcohol and drugs are more likely
    to be involved in violent behaviors.
  • Is the violence connection true for rural
    children and adolescents?

18
Supporting Research
  • NESARC Data.
  • Teenagers who begin drinking before age 15 have
    four times the risk of developing alcohol
    dependence later in life.
  • Adolescents with histories of extensive alcohol
    use have noticeable changes in brain function
    that impair learning, memory, and problem
    solving smaller hippocampal volume.

19
EUDL What Works?
  • Law is to prevent youthful consumption.
  • Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
    Prevention program.
  • 360,000 to each state and discretionary grants of
    1 million.
  • Required to have justice system participate in
    community coalition
  • Research Response
  • NIAAA is evaluating the EUDL program in rural
    communities of 7 states to determine the
    effectiveness of programs.
  • The National Evaluation Excluded communities of
    under 50,000.

20
Why Do We Need Research?
  • Difficult to enforce
  • Uneven
  • Lack of police resources
  • Legal process is expensive
  • Results can be harsh
  • Community programs have limited resources.
  • Communities have limited attention spans.

21
Rural Research Needed
  • What prevention programs can be effective in
    rural settings?
  • Who needs intervention and treatment in rural
    communities?
  • How can service delivery be economically
    accessible?
  • What are barriers to research?
  • Can methodologies be developed to compensate for
    small numbers?

22
Fetal Alcohol
  • Law and policy not supported by research.
  • Punitive laws used to prevent mother from
    drinking may be more harmful.
  • Laws are unenforceable.
  • Research about rural and small town attitudes
    indicates need for more studies.

23
Rural Questions about FASD
  • Purpose This 2-part study examines gender
    differences in attitudes and perceived barriers
    to intervention in a large community sample of
    persons living in rural and small-town
    environments in Kentucky (n 3,346). The study
    also examines rural/small-town prenatal service
    providers' perceptions of barriers to assessment
    and intervention with pregnant substance abusers
    (n 138).
  • Findings Overall results of the community sample
    suggest that neither males nor females were
    knowledgeable about the harmful effects of
    alcohol use during pregnancy. Results also
    indicate substantial gender differences in
    alcohol attitudes, knowledge, and perceived
    barriers. Further, prenatal care providers
    identified several barriers in assessment and
    treatment of pregnant women with alcohol use
    problems in rural and small-town communities,
    including lack of knowledge and comfort with
    assessment as well as a lack of available and
    accessible treatment for referrals.

24
Cite
  • Rural and small-town attitudes about alcohol use
    during pregnancy A community and provider sample
  • Logan TK, Walker R, Nagle L, Lewis J, Wiesenhahn
    D
  • JOURNAL OF RURAL HEALTH 19 (4) 497-505 FAL 2003
  • Abstract
  • Context While there has been considerable
    research on prenatal alcohol use, there have been
    limited studies focused on women in rural and
    small-town environments.
  • Purpose This 2-part study examines gender
    differences in attitudes and perceived barriers
    to intervention in a large community sample of
    persons living in rural and small-town
    environments in Kentucky (n 3,346). The study
    also examines rural/small-town prenatal service
    providers' perceptions of barriers to assessment
    and intervention with pregnant substance abusers
    (n 138).
  • Methods Surveys were administered to a
    convenience sample of employees and customers
    from 16 rural and small-town community outlets.
    There were 1503 males (45) and 1843 females
    (55) ranging in age from under 18 years old to
    over 66 years old. Surveys also were mailed to
    prenatal providers in county health departments
    of the 13-county study area, with 138 of 149
    responding.
  • Findings Overall results of the community sample
    suggest that neither males nor females were
    knowledgeable about the harmful effects of
    alcohol use during pregnancy. Results also
    indicate substantial gender differences in
    alcohol attitudes, knowledge, and perceived
    barriers. Further, prenatal care providers
    identified several barriers in assessment and
    treatment of pregnant women with alcohol use
    problems in rural and small-town communities,
    including lack of knowledge and comfort with
    assessment as well as a lack of available and
    accessible treatment for referrals.
  • KeyWords PlusLOW-BIRTH-WEIGHT, SUBSTANCE-ABUSE,
    DRINKING, LIFE, RISK, CONSEQUENCES, PREVENTION,
    BEHAVIOR, CHILDREN, GROWTH
  • Addresses
  • Logan TK, Univ Kentucky, Ctr Drug Alcohol Res,
    Dept Behav Sci, 1151 Red Mile Rd,Suite 1-A,
    Lexington, KY 40504 USA
  • Univ Kentucky, Ctr Drug Alcohol Res, Dept Behav
    Sci, Lexington, KY 40504 USA
  • Bluegrass Reg Mental Hlth Mental Retardat Board
    I, Lexington, KY USA

25
NCJFCJ
  • SPRING 2004 VOLUME 55 NO. 2
  • FETAL ALCOHOL SPECTRUM DISORDERS (FASD) AND THE
    ROLE OF FAMILY COURT JUDGES IN IMPROVING OUTCOMES
    FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES
  • by Diane V. Malbin
  • Abstract Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD)
    is a physical disability that is 95 under
    diagnosed and 40 times over-represented in
    juvenile justice.

26
My Suggestions
  • DEMAND research that is relevant and applicable
    to the rural communities.
  • Consider the appropriate role of the courts
    around alcohol abuse and dependence and the
    unique circumstances of the rural courts.
  • Promote a better understanding of rural alcohol
    issues as systemic public health concerns.

27
Alcohol use disorders are an epidemic that the
justice system cannot prevent nor cure.
  • .

But the community can
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