Recovery Management With Offender Populations S. Doug Lemon, Psy.D. Licensed Clinical Psychologist Chief Psychologist United States Penitentiary, McCreary.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
David Ensley, Chief Research and Data Analysis Program Statistics.
Advertisements

Aims of the session To learn about DisabilityCare Australia, the National Disability Insurance Scheme To explore how to prepare for DisabilityCare Australia.
Assess and provide Services for Clients with Complex Needs
Chapter 15 Sentencing Options
+ Victoria Goldberg, MA The Center for Advancing Correctional Excellence (ACE!) George Mason University The Use of Peer Navigation in the Criminal Justice.
What is the term that defines the men and women we supervise? Parolee Probationer Offender Supervised Releasee Restored Citizen Returning Citizen Client.
1 Michigan Department of Corrections Office of Community Corrections  Office of Community Corrections was created pursuant to Public Act 511 of 1988,
NAMI Florida Annual State Conference 2014 Veterans Justice Outreach Program Malcolm Randall VA Medical Center 1601 SW Archer Rd. Gainesville, FL
Residential Community Supervision Programs
Key to the Exercises  Pre-class Work II  the crime problem; serious; crimes; criminals; ine third of; 41 million; 36 to 40 million  soft; crimes and.
" The Impact of Criminal Justice Policies and Practices on Minorities" 2009.
REHAB Milestones Clinical Services Options IOP REHAB Milestones Clinical Services Options IOP Treatment Programs.
“Justice Reinvestment through Policy Analysis in South Carolina” South Carolina State Senator Gerald Malloy 1.
1 The Importance of Successful Reentry to Jail Population Growth Presented by: Allen J. Beck, Chief Corrections Statistics Program Bureau of Justice Statistics.
A MERICAN P SYCHOLOGICAL A SSOCIATION 11. Forensic Issues II.
SMART JUSTICE SYMPOSIUM Lt. Joanne Lake Spokane County Sheriff’s Office Detention Services Assistant Facility Commander-Geiger.
Presentation to the Maine Board of Corrections Maine County Correctional System POISED FOR CHANGE? SEPTEMBER 2008.
Women and Corrections: A Model Program By Vanessa Alleyne,PhD.
REDUCING CRIMINALIZATION OF PERSONS WITH SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS H. Richard Lamb, M.D. August 18, 2012.
VA Programs for Justice-Involved Veterans
ENROLLING JUSTICE INVOLVED POPULATIONS: POLICY IMPLICATIONS LINDSAY NELSON KENTUCKY PRIMARY CARE ASSOCIATION.
Substance Abuse Treatment and Corrections
Second Chances: Housing and Services for Re-entering Prisoners National Alliance to End Homelessness Annual Conference Nikki Delgado Program Manager Corporation.
The Bishops of Texas have endorsed the Texas Catholic Action Plan for Criminal Justice. Why? Meet Pastoral Needs for 1.1 Million Men & Women Stimulate.
Probation Operations Department of Corrections GEORGIA House Bill 1176 Implementation Presented by: Jay Sanders Special Assistant to the Director of Probation.
In the Community. Community Corrections Continues after incarceration And it deals with split sentences.
The Effective Management of Juvenile Sex Offenders in the Community Section 6: Reentry.
Lost Opportunities: The Reality of Latinos in the U.S. Criminal Justice System Nancy E. Walker J. Michael Senger Francisco A. Villarruel Angela M. Arboleda.
400 Employees 1,300 Offenders under supervision 400 Employees 1,300 Offenders under supervision.
Delaware Health and Social Services NAMI Delaware Conference: January 24, 2013 Rita Landgraf, Secretary, Department of Health and Social Services ACA and.
Chapter 40 Rehabilitation. Objectives Identify the major factors that affect criminal behavior Explain the role of correctional treatment programs in.
1 THE MINISTRY OF THE SOLICITOR GENERAL Office of the Correctional Investigator Royal Canadian Mounted Police Solicitor General Department National Parole.
The Rhode Island Experience Ellen Evans Alexander Assistant Director RI Department of Corrections.
Housing Matters Michael Nail Executive Director Board Members: Albert R. Murray, Chair; Terry E. Barnard, Vice-Chair; James E. Donald; James W. Mills &
By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:  LO1 Define community corrections and discuss its role in the criminal justice system  LO2 Describe.
Housing: A Significant Reentry Barrier Nicole E. Sullivan NC Department of Correction Office of Research and Planning.
© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill Chapter 5 Intermediate Sanctions: Between Probation and Incarceration 1.
The Coalition of Community Corrections Providers of New Jersey A Partnership Responding to Prisoner Re-entry.
Evaluations of CDCR Substance Abuse Programs: Lessons Learned Michael L. Prendergast, Ph.D. Criminal Justice Research Group UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse.
Theodore M. Hammett, Ph.D. Sofia Kennedy, M.P.H. Drug Abuse and Risky Behaviors: The Evolving Dynamics of HIV/AIDS NIH-Bethesda, MD May 9, 2007 HIV/AIDS.
Chapter 5 Intermediate Sanctions Alternatives to incarceration Operated by probation/parole agencies No need to create new bureaucracies More punitive.
North Carolina TASC NC TASC Bridging Systems for Effective Offender Care Management.
Public Safety Improvement Act. Criminal Justice Initiative Work Group Process 35+ stakeholder meetings 6 meetings from July through October 2012 – Analyzed.
JUNE 1, 2013 PRESENTED BY ROSS C PETERSON VICE PRESIDENT, TELECARE CORPORATION “Coming Home” Recovery, Treatment, & Funding Strategies for successful reintegration.
2 3 Texas has one of the largest Probation Populations in the United States (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2007) 4 Selected StatesProbation Population.
The criminal justice system in America was created to keep communities safe, to respect and restore victims, and to return offenders who leave prison.
U NIT 6 By: Amy Ng, ABD, MSCJA. O BJECTIVES Weekly Reminders Holiday Info Drug Treatment.
Public Safety and Offender Rehabilitation Services Act of 2007 (AB 900) Implementation and Impact on County Mental Health Robin Dezember Chief Deputy Secretary.
Understanding the Criminal Justice System CJUS 101 Community-Based Corrections.
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CRIMINAL MENTAL HEALTH PROJECT Miami-Dade County, Florida.
ACCELERATED COMMUNITY ENTRY United States District Court Western District of Michigan Robert Holmes Bell Chief Judge.
Chapter 5 Intermediate Sanctions 1.  Intermediate sanctions emerged in the 1980s due to three factors: The belief that prisons were being overused Prison.
Substance Abuse Treatment: An Alternative to Prison By Heather Apo-Ewers Communications 1010 November 10, 2013.
Federal Bureau of Prisons.  Identify 3 critical developments in the history of residential substance abuse treatment in the Bureau.  Identify the 10.
List 3 reason as to why you think most people commit legally deviant acts. (crimes)
Protect Vermonters by operating safe, humane, and secure facilities and by preparing offenders to become productive law-abiding community citizens. DOC.
International Legislators Forum: Minnesota Criminal Justice Issues
Juvenile Reentry Programs Palm Beach County
MEDICS CATALONIA PROJECT
Using the National Criminal Justice Treatment Practices (NCJTP) Survey
Justice Division Strategic Planning
10 Probation, Parole, and Community Corrections.
Viral Hepatitis in Correctional Settings
RSAT History, Best Practices and Future
Beyond the referral Presented by:
Alternatives to Suicide Peer-to-Peer Groups
10 Probation, Parole, and Community Corrections.
Substance abuse & criminal charges {Bridges Not Barriers}
Proposed opportunity for Barbara Moore House
By Martha Saucedo, lCSW August 20,2018
Presentation transcript:

Recovery Management With Offender Populations S. Doug Lemon, Psy.D. Licensed Clinical Psychologist Chief Psychologist United States Penitentiary, McCreary The views expressed in written conference materials or by this speaker do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Federal Bureau of Prisons; nor does mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

Offender Statistics United States ▪In 2013, 2.3 million prisoners held in Federal or State prisons or local jails. ▪Nearly 7 million people under some form of correctional supervision (2013). ▪57% of those are probationers. 25% of probationers were female (2013). ▪In 2002, 66% of jail inmates reported they were regular drug users. ▪Almost a third of these said they were using drugs at the time of their arrest. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Prison Statistics.

Prison Programs 74% state/federal facilities have substance abuse programs 58% have mental health programs Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Prison Statistics 2005

Offender Statistics Florida ▪Approximately 100,000 inmates housed in the Florida DOC. ▪11,000 inmates participated in substance abuse treatment. ▪38,000 participated in community-based substance abuse programs. Source: Florida Department of Corrections, 2013 Annual Report.

Barriers to Treatment Education ▪Nationally, 41% of inmates have less than a high school diploma, compared to 18% of the general population. Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report: Education and Correctional Populations, January, 2003.

Barriers to Treatment Culture ▪Antisocial individuals often subscribe to a counter-culture world view ▪Macho attitudes are very common among male offenders ▪Offenders are often more resistant to treatment than individuals in the general population ▪Short-sighted thinking is the norm ▪Egocentrism abounds

Barriers to Treatment Lifestyle ▪Criminal thinking ▪Blinders ▪Living for the moment ▪Extremely materialistic ▪See hard-working, law-abiding citizens as weak or square

Barriers to Treatment Environmental Factors ▪Peer pressure to avoid mental health/substance abuse treatment ▪Correctional facilities are very negative environments ▪Family support is often lacking or non-existent

Barriers to Treatment Sentence Length ▪“I don’t have enough time” ▪“I’ll start programming when I get short”

Barriers to Treatment Providers are viewed as “police” ▪Be up front about limits of confidentiality ▪Be consistent! ▪Show your concern, don’t talk about it

Barriers to Treatment Aftercare ▪Little to no coordination between providers in prison and those in the community ▪There is evidence this is beginning to change

Treatment Options Psycho-educational Groups ▪Drug Abuse Education ▸ Often mandatory. ▸ Typically hours ▸ May spark interest in additional programs ▸ Helps weed out inmates not appropriate for more in-depth programs

Treatment Options Psycho-educational Groups ▪Breaking Barriers (Instar Performance) ▸ Voluntary ▸ Cognitive Re-structuring techniques ▸ Introduces the Reality Model * Results take time to measure *Will it meet my needs over time?

Treatment Options 12-Step Programs ▪Voluntary ▪May be more acceptable in the prison culture than traditional drug treatment ▪Sponsorship is more difficult ▪Work best if assisted by community volunteers ▪There are security concerns with this, though

Treatment Options Inside Out ▪Has its roots in SMART Recovery ▪Members must be selected ▪6-month program ▪Inmate co-facilitator ▪Role plays

Treatment Options Non-residential treatment (4-6 months) Intensive outpatient treatment (FL)

Treatment Options Residential Drug Abuse Program Challenge Program ▪Intensive ▪Therapeutic community model ▪Longer-term treatment (9-12 months) ▪Some eligible for early release after completion ▪Should involve halfway house component ▪Similar to Residential Therapeutic Community (FL) ▪Some offer dual diagnosis programs

Criminal Thinking/Beliefs 5 Most Common Beliefs ▪INMATE: “You can’t help me unless you have experienced what I have. You’ve never sold drugs or used them. How can you help?” COUNSELOR: “Have you heard of a male obstetrician?” ▪INMATE: “If you grew up where I grew up, you’d be doing the same thing.” COUNSELOR: “Some day you’ve got to let that go, or you’ll never be successful.” ▪INMATE: “Why get treatment in prison? I’ve got to do it on parole.”

Criminal Thinking/Beliefs 5 Most Common Beliefs, continued COUNSELOR: “Sobriety/recovery takes practice.” ▪INMATE: “I haven’t thought about or used drugs since I came to prison, so I know I’m not going to when I am released.” COUNSELOR: “You don’t have the same stressors and easy access to your drug of choice now.” ▪INMATE: “If I can’t get the time off, I’m not going to the residential drug program.” COUNSELOR: “If you don’t get treatment, you will end up spending a whole lot more time in jail, or end up dead.”

Therapeutic Techniques What works? ▪Use a culturally-sensitive approach ▪Reality model is very useful ▪Talk in terms of being successful rather than moralizing ▪Encourage greater self-awareness ▪Use groups when possible ▪Teach cognitive re-structuring ▪Know when to hold ‘em and when to fold ‘em

Therapeutic Techniques What works for you?