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Policing and Society
An International Journal of Research and Policy
Volume 20, 2010 - Issue 3
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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Assessing the impact of a high-intensity partnership between the police and drug treatment service in addressing the offending of problematic drug users

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Pages 358-369 | Received 27 Jul 2009, Published online: 29 Jul 2010
 

Abstract

While there is a considerable evidence base showing links between drug use and offending and clear evidence of the impact of treatment engagement on drug-related offending, there is a much smaller UK evidence base on ‘what works’ in treatment and criminal justice partnerships, particularly in the UK. The current study used police arrest data to measure changes in offending behaviour in 116 drug-using offenders who had tested positive for opiates or cocaine in custody suites on at least three occasions in the previous year. Participants were assigned to either an intensive form of ‘quasi-coercive’ treatment (the High Crime Causing Users, HCCU) or to treatment as usual from the community Drug Interventions Programme team. The study compares changes in offending in a high-rate offending group with a standard treatment intervention. The assessment of the effectiveness of the intervention was based on arrest rates in the 12 months before and after engagement with the programme, supplemented by data collected from treatment case notes. Data analysis showed a significant reduction in offending in those engaged in the HCCU, who had higher pre-entry offending, but no change in offending for those accessing treatment as usual. There was some indication that greater retention in treatment was linked to better outcomes, and that medical sessions were associated with greater reductions in crime. The results provide some support for intensive partnership working between criminal justice drug services and the police, and suggest that intensive community work with high-rate drug-using offenders can be effective.

Notes

1. No details were available on the types of offences people were arrested for.

2. It may be that this is a result of unintended selection bias or simply a coincidence.

3. Completion of treatment is defined by the NTA for Substance Misuse (Citation2002) as a planned discharge from treatment.

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