Substance use disorders among criminal offenders present a unique challenge to criminal justice and public health systems. These systems must balance punishment and rehabilitation while simultaneously dealing with addiction - a chronic, cyclical, and multidimensional disease that is pervasive among criminal offenders and requires long-term monitoring and extended care protocols (McLellan et al., 2000;Scott et al., 2003). Women offenders, approximately 70% of whom have substance dependence or abuse issues (BJS, 2002), are of particular concern from economic, clinical, and criminal justice perspectives as they represent the fastest growing subgroup in local jails (BJS, 2003). Women offenders are also more likely to have co-occurring mental health problems that further complicate their rehabilitation and recovery process upon reentering society (CASA, 2010). Moreover, the social and economic implications of addiction and criminality extend to the children of women offenders. The need to address substance use within the women offender population has generated interest in Recovery Management Checkups (RMCs), an evidence-based approach to promoting long-term recovery that provides clients with periodic monitoring, feedback, and linkage with treatment as needed. The Recovery Management Checkups for Women Offenders (RMC-WO) intervention is currently testing the long-term effectiveness of the RMC model with a group of women offenders coming out of jail. These interventions are designed to reduce substance use, HIV-risk behaviors, and criminal recidivism. Very little economic research has been conducted on community re-entry and long term monitoring models for women offenders that have the potential to improve long-term outcomes and lower total costs to society. In response to the pressing need for economic evaluations of RMCs, the proposed research project will estimate the costs, cost effectiveness, and net benefits of RMC-WO relative to a control condition.
The specific aims of this research are as follows: 1. Estimate the economic cost (total and per client) of the RMC-WO intervention. 2. Estimate the cost effectiveness of RMC-WO relative to the control group over the three-year follow-up period for core outcomes (substance use, HIV risk behaviors, illegal activity) and ancillary outcomes (treatment engagement and treatment retention). 3. Obtain or derive appropriate monetary conversion factors and estimate the economic benefits of RMC- WO relative to the control group over the three-year follow-up period to form benefit-cost ratios and net benefit estimates. Successfully fulfilling these aims will not only advance scientific knowledge of the overall impact of addiction interventions for women offenders but also improve clinical practice by increasing our understanding of the financial considerations of implementing RMC-WO on a broader scale.

Public Health Relevance

Despite the progress and increasing use of economic evaluation methods in addiction research, rigorous economic evaluation of post-release interventions for women offenders remains rare. From a public health perspective, women offenders are of special concern because they are a rapidly growing subpopulation among all offenders and because they are vulnerable to numerous forces that carry a high personal and social cost. The proposed study will conduct the first comprehensive economic analysis of a randomized control trial of Recovery Management Checkups for Women Offenders (RMC-WO) to examine the cost effectiveness and net social benefits of this intervention and to provide treatment providers, criminal justice agencies and policy makers with empirical evidence of the economic impact of RMC-WO.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01DA031785-01
Application #
8162167
Study Section
Community-Level Health Promotion Study Section (CLHP)
Program Officer
Duffy, Sarah Q
Project Start
2011-07-01
Project End
2014-04-30
Budget Start
2011-07-01
Budget End
2012-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$363,375
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Miami School of Medicine
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
052780918
City
Coral Gables
State
FL
Country
United States
Zip Code
33146
McCollister, Kathryn; Yang, Xuan; McKay, James R (2016) Cost-effectiveness analysis of a continuing care intervention for cocaine-dependent adults. Drug Alcohol Depend 158:38-44
McCollister, Kathryn E; Freitas, Derek M; Prado, Guillermo et al. (2014) Opportunity costs and financial incentives for Hispanic youth participating in a family-based HIV and substance use preventive intervention. J Prim Prev 35:13-20
McCollister, Kathryn E; Scott, Christy K; Dennis, Michael L et al. (2014) Economic Costs of a Postrelease Intervention for Incarcerated Female Substance Abusers: Recovery Management Checkups for Women Offenders (RMC-WO). J Offender Rehabil 53:543-561
McCollister, Kathryn E; French, Michael T; Freitas, Derek M et al. (2013) Cost-effectiveness analysis of Recovery Management Checkups (RMC) for adults with chronic substance use disorders: evidence from a 4-year randomized trial. Addiction 108:2166-74