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Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study

BACKGROUND: With significant numbers of individuals in the criminal justice system having mental health problems, court-based diversion programmes and liaison services have been established to address this problem. AIMS: To examine the effectiveness of the New South Wales (Australia) court diversion...

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Autores principales: Albalawi, Olayan, Chowdhury, Nabila Zohora, Wand, Handan, Allnutt, Stephen, Greenberg, David, Adily, Armita, Kariminia, Azar, Schofield, Peter, Sara, Grant, Hanson, Sarah, O'Driscoll, Colman, Butler, Tony
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6343116/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30762501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2018.71
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author Albalawi, Olayan
Chowdhury, Nabila Zohora
Wand, Handan
Allnutt, Stephen
Greenberg, David
Adily, Armita
Kariminia, Azar
Schofield, Peter
Sara, Grant
Hanson, Sarah
O'Driscoll, Colman
Butler, Tony
author_facet Albalawi, Olayan
Chowdhury, Nabila Zohora
Wand, Handan
Allnutt, Stephen
Greenberg, David
Adily, Armita
Kariminia, Azar
Schofield, Peter
Sara, Grant
Hanson, Sarah
O'Driscoll, Colman
Butler, Tony
author_sort Albalawi, Olayan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: With significant numbers of individuals in the criminal justice system having mental health problems, court-based diversion programmes and liaison services have been established to address this problem. AIMS: To examine the effectiveness of the New South Wales (Australia) court diversion programme in reducing re-offending among those diagnosed with psychosis by comparing the treatment order group with a comparison group who received a punitive sanction. METHOD: Those with psychoses were identified from New South Wales Ministry of Health records between 2001 and 2012 and linked to offending records. Cox regression models were used to identify factors associated with re-offending. RESULTS: A total of 7743 individuals were identified as diagnosed with a psychotic disorder prior to their court finalisation date for their first principal offence. Overall, 26% of the cohort received a treatment order and 74% received a punitive sanction. The re-offending rate in the treatment order group was 12% lower than the punitive sanction group. ‘Acts intended to cause injury’ was the most common type of the first principal offence for the treatment order group compared with the punitive sanction group (48% v. 27%). Drug-related offences were more likely to be punished with a punitive sanction than a treatment order (12% v. 2%). CONCLUSIONS: Among those with a serious mental illness (i.e. psychosis), receiving a treatment order by the court rather than a punitive sanction was associated with reduced risk for subsequent offending. We further examined actual mental health treatment received and found that receiving no treatment following the first offence was associated with an increased risk of re-offending and, so, highlighting the importance of treatment for those with serious mental illness in the criminal justice system.
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spelling pubmed-63431162019-01-31 Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study Albalawi, Olayan Chowdhury, Nabila Zohora Wand, Handan Allnutt, Stephen Greenberg, David Adily, Armita Kariminia, Azar Schofield, Peter Sara, Grant Hanson, Sarah O'Driscoll, Colman Butler, Tony BJPsych Open Papers BACKGROUND: With significant numbers of individuals in the criminal justice system having mental health problems, court-based diversion programmes and liaison services have been established to address this problem. AIMS: To examine the effectiveness of the New South Wales (Australia) court diversion programme in reducing re-offending among those diagnosed with psychosis by comparing the treatment order group with a comparison group who received a punitive sanction. METHOD: Those with psychoses were identified from New South Wales Ministry of Health records between 2001 and 2012 and linked to offending records. Cox regression models were used to identify factors associated with re-offending. RESULTS: A total of 7743 individuals were identified as diagnosed with a psychotic disorder prior to their court finalisation date for their first principal offence. Overall, 26% of the cohort received a treatment order and 74% received a punitive sanction. The re-offending rate in the treatment order group was 12% lower than the punitive sanction group. ‘Acts intended to cause injury’ was the most common type of the first principal offence for the treatment order group compared with the punitive sanction group (48% v. 27%). Drug-related offences were more likely to be punished with a punitive sanction than a treatment order (12% v. 2%). CONCLUSIONS: Among those with a serious mental illness (i.e. psychosis), receiving a treatment order by the court rather than a punitive sanction was associated with reduced risk for subsequent offending. We further examined actual mental health treatment received and found that receiving no treatment following the first offence was associated with an increased risk of re-offending and, so, highlighting the importance of treatment for those with serious mental illness in the criminal justice system. Cambridge University Press 2019-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6343116/ /pubmed/30762501 http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2018.71 Text en © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2019 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Papers
Albalawi, Olayan
Chowdhury, Nabila Zohora
Wand, Handan
Allnutt, Stephen
Greenberg, David
Adily, Armita
Kariminia, Azar
Schofield, Peter
Sara, Grant
Hanson, Sarah
O'Driscoll, Colman
Butler, Tony
Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study
title Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study
title_full Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study
title_fullStr Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study
title_full_unstemmed Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study
title_short Court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study
title_sort court diversion for those with psychosis and its impact on re-offending rates: results from a longitudinal data-linkage study
topic Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6343116/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30762501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2018.71
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