31 results on '"Urada, Darren"'
Search Results
2. Cost-Effectiveness of Publicly Funded Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder in California.
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Krebs, Emanuel, Enns, Benjamin, Evans, Elizabeth, Urada, Darren, Anglin, M. Douglas, Rawson, Richard A., Hser, Yih-Ing, and Nosyk, Bohdan
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DRUG abuse treatment ,OPIOID abuse ,COST effectiveness ,ECONOMICS ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Background: Only 1 in 5 of the nearly 2.4 million Americans with an opioid use disorder received treatment in 2015. Fewer than half of Californians who received treatment in 2014 received opioid agonist treatment (OAT), and regulations for admission to OAT in California are more stringent than federal regulations. Objective: To determine the cost-effectiveness of OAT for all treatment recipients compared with the observed standard of care for patients presenting with opioid use disorder to California's publicly funded treatment facilities. Design: Model-based cost-effectiveness analysis. Data Sources: Linked population-level administrative databases capturing treatment and criminal justice records for California (2006 to 2010); published literature. Target Population: Persons initially presenting for publicly funded treatment of opioid use disorder. Time Horizon: Lifetime. Perspective: Societal. Intervention: Immediate access to OAT with methadone for all treatment recipients compared with the observed standard of care (54.3% initiate opioid use disorder treatment with medically managed withdrawal). Outcome Measures: Discounted quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) and discounted costs. Results of Base-Case Analysis: Immediate access to OAT for all treatment recipients costs less (by $78 257), with patients accumulating more QALYs (by 0.42) than with the observed standard of care. In a hypothetical scenario where all Californians starting treatment of opioid use disorder in 2014 had immediate access to OAT, total lifetime savings for this cohort could be as high as $3.8 billion. Results of Sensitivity Analysis: 99.6% of the 2000 simulations resulted in lower costs and more QALYs. Limitation: Nonrandomized delivery of OAT or medically managed withdrawal. Conclusion: The value of publicly funded treatment of opioid use disorder in California is maximized when OAT is delivered to all patients presenting for treatment, providing greater health benefits and cost savings than the observed standard of care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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3. The costs of crime during and after publicly funded treatment for opioid use disorders: a population-level study for the state of California.
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Krebs, Emanuel, Urada, Darren, Evans, Elizabeth, Huang, David, Hser, Yih‐Ing, and Nosyk, Bohdan
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OPIOID abuse , *DRUG abuse prevention , *DRUG abuse prevention -- Finance , *CRIME statistics , *ECONOMIC impact of crime , *MEDICATION abuse , *PREVENTION , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *CRIME , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *CHI-squared test , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *CRIMINALS , *DRUGS , *FISHER exact test , *NARCOTICS , *PROBABILITY theory , *RESEARCH funding , *GOVERNMENT aid , *DETOXIFICATION (Alternative medicine) , *TREATMENT programs , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test - Abstract
Background and aims Treatment for opioid use disorders (OUD) reduces the risk of mortality and infectious disease transmission; however, opportunities to quantify the potential economic benefits of associated decreases in drug-related crime are scarce. This paper aimed to estimate the costs of crime during and after periods of engagement in publicly funded treatment for OUD to compare total costs of crime during a hypothetical 6-month period following initiation of opioid agonist treatment (OAT) versus detoxification. Design Retrospective, administrative data-based cohort study with comprehensive information on drug treatment and criminal justice systems interactions. Setting Publicly funded drug treatment facilities in California, USA (2006-10). Participants A total of 31 659 individuals admitted for the first time to treatment for OUD, and who were linked with criminal justice and mortality data, were followed during a median 2.3 years. Median age at first treatment admission was 32, 35.8% were women and 37.1% primarily used prescription opioids. Measurements Daily costs of crime (US$2014) were calculated from a societal perspective and were composed of the costs of policing, court, corrections and criminal victimization. We estimated the average marginal effect of treatment engagement in OAT or detoxification adjusting for potential fixed and time-varying confounders, including drug use and criminal justice system involvement prior to treatment initiation. Findings Daily costs of crime during treatment compared with after treatment were $126 lower for OAT [95% confidence interval (CI) = $116, $136] and $144 lower for detoxification (95% CI = $135, $154). Summing the costs of crime during and after treatment over a hypothetical 6-month period using the observed median durations of OAT (161 days) and detoxification (19 days), we estimated that enrolling an individual in OAT as opposed to detoxification would save $17 550 ($16 840, $18 383). Conclusions In publicly funded drug treatment facilities in California, USA, engagement in treatment for opioid use disorders is associated with lower costs of crime in the 6 months following initiation of treatment, and the economic benefits were far greater for individuals receiving time-unlimited treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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4. The Effect of the Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System 1115 Demonstration Waiver on Substance Use Disorder Treatment Access: Evidence from California.
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Bass, Brittany, Urada, Darren, Khurana, Dhruv, Boustead, Anne, and Joshi, Vandana
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HEALTH services accessibility , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *WAIVER , *PHARMACODYNAMICS , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
In August 2015, the California Department of Health Care Services created the Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System 1115 demonstration waiver (DMC-ODS waiver) to improve service delivery to Medi-Cal-eligible individuals with a substance use disorder (SUD). We examine if implementing the DMC-ODS waiver across California counties improved patient access to SUD treatment services. We use administrative data from 2016 to 2020 from a reporting system for all publicly-funded SUD treatment services delivered in California and employ difference-in-differences and event study empirical strategies exploiting the differential timing of DMC-ODS waiver adoption across counties. Event study analyses show that eleven or more months after the introduction of the DMC-ODS waiver, the number of unique patient admissions significantly increase by nearly 20%. Residential treatment admissions significantly increase by roughly 25% in all months post-waiver introduction. This study provides valuable information for policymakers about implementing 1115 waivers, and the important public health implications. California's DMC-ODS waiver has demonstrated that 1115 waivers similar to it can likely increase access to SUD treatment. • We are the first to estimate the impact of CA's DMC-ODS 1115 demonstration waiver on SUD treatment admissions. • We use the universe of admissions to publicly-funded SUD treatment facilities, and a difference-in-difference design. • Unique patient admissions to SUD treatment significantly increase by 20 % 11 and more months post waiver implementation. • Residential SUD treatment admissions significantly increase by nearly 25 %. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Mortality among individuals accessing pharmacological treatment for opioid dependence in California, 2006-10.
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Evans, Elizabeth, Li, Libo, Min, Jeong, Huang, David, Urada, Darren, Liu, Lei, Hser, Yih‐Ing, and Nosyk, Bohdan
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METHADONE treatment programs ,MORTALITY risk factors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CAUSES of death ,NARCOTICS ,RESEARCH funding ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aims To estimate mortality rates among treated opioid-dependent individuals by cause and in relation to the general population, and to estimate the instantaneous effects of opioid detoxification and maintenance treatment (MMT) on the hazard of all-cause and cause-specific mortality. Design Population-based treatment cohort study. Setting Linked mortality data on all individuals first enrolled in publicly funded pharmacological treatment for opioid dependence in California, USA from 2006 to 2010. Participants A total of 32 322 individuals, among whom there were 1031 deaths (3.2%) over a median follow-up of 2.6 years (interquartile range = 1.4-3.7). Measurements The primary outcome was mortality, indicated by time to death, crude mortality rates (CMR) and standardized mortality ratios (SMR). Findings Individuals being treated for opioid dependence had a more than fourfold increase of mortality risk compared with the general population [SMR = 4.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 4.2, 4.8]. Mortality risk was higher (1) when individuals were out-of-treatment (SMR = 6.1, 95% CI = 5.7, 6.5) than in-treatment (SMR = 1.8, 95% CI = 1.6, 2.1) and (2) during detoxification (SMR = 2.4, 95% CI = 1.5, 3.8) than during MMT (SMR = 1.8, 95% CI = 1.5, 2.1), especially in the 2 weeks post-treatment entry (SMR = 5.5, 95% CI = 2.7, 9.8 versus SMR = 2.5, 95% CI = 1.7, 4.9). Detoxification and MMT both independently reduced the instantaneous hazard of all-cause and drug-related mortality. MMT preceded by detoxification was associated with lower all-cause and other cause-specific mortality than MMT alone. Conclusions In people with opiate dependence, detoxification and methadone maintenance treatment both independently reduce the instantaneous hazard of all-cause and drug-related mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Comparative Effectiveness of California’s Proposition 36 and Drug Court Programs Before and After Propensity Score Matching.
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Evans, Elizabeth, Li, Libo, Urada, Darren, and Anglin, M. Douglas
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DRUG courts ,RECIDIVISM ,EMPIRICAL research ,DATA analysis ,HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
California’s voter-initiated Proposition 36 (Prop 36) program is often unfavorably compared with drug courts but little is empirically known about the comparative effectiveness of the two approaches. Using statewide administrative data, analyses were conducted on all Prop 36 and drug court offenders with official records of arrest and drug treatment. Propensity score matching was used to create equivalent groups, enabling comparisons of success at treatment discharge, recidivism over 12 months posttreatment entry, and the magnitude of behavioral changes. Significant behavioral improvements occurred for both Prop 36 and drug court offenders, but although more Prop 36 offenders were successful at discharge, more recidivated over a period of 12 months. Core programmatic differences likely contributed to the differences in outcomes. Policy implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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7. Offender Diversion Into Substance Use Disorder Treatment: The Economic Impact of California's Proposition 36.
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Anglin, M. Douglas, Nosyk, Bohdan, Jaffe, Adi, Urada, Darren, and Evans, Elizabeth
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LOCAL government -- Economic aspects ,RECIDIVISM ,BLACK people ,CHI-squared test ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COST effectiveness ,CRIMINALS ,HISPANIC Americans ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PROBATION ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATE governments ,STATISTICS ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,TREATMENT programs ,CONTROL groups ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Objectives. We determined the costs and savings attributable to the California Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act (SACPA), which mandated probation or continued parole with substance abuse treatment in lieu of incarceration for adult offenders convicted of nonviolent drug offenses and probation and parole violators. Methods. We used individually linked, population-level administrative data to define intervention and control cohorts of offenders meeting SACPA eligibility criteria. Using multivariate difference-in-differences analysis, we estimated the effect of SACPA implementation on the total and domain-specific costs to state and county governments, controlling for fixed individual and county characteristics and changes in crime at the county level. Results. The additional costs of treatment were more than offset by savings in other domains, primarily in the costs of incarceration. We estimated the statewide policy effect as an adjusted savings of $2317 (95% confidence interval = $1905, $2730) per offender over a 30-month postconviction period. SACPA implementation resulted in greater incremental cost savings for Blacks and Hispanics, who had markedly higher rates of conviction and incarceration. Conclusions. The monetary benefits to government exceeded the additional costs of SACPA implementation and provision of treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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8. Perceptions of Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Services Integration Among the Workforce in Primary Care Settings.
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Urada, Darren, Schaper, Elizabeth, Alvarez, Lily, Reilly, Christopher, Dawar, Mona, Field, Robyn, Antonini, Valerie, Oeser, Brandy, Crèvecoeur-MacPhail, Desirée, and Rawson, RichardA.
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MENTAL health services , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *PRIMARY care , *MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
It is important to understand the perceptions of staff members who will be implementing the expected integration of mental health and substance use services into primary care. Surveys were administered to mental health/substance use disorder (MH/SUD) staff, support staff (SS), and primary care providers (PCPs) from three organizations (seven sites) that were participating in an initiative to promote the integration of MH/SUD services into primary care in Kern County, California. Results suggest that integration and MH/SUD services are highly valued among all staff types, and that staff are uniformly interested in further MH/SUD training. However, there were significant differences in staff perceptions. MH/SUD staff and services were valued by PCPs more than MH/SUD staff perceived being valued by PCPs, and MH/SUD staff were less likely to agree that communication with PCPs was good. Information seemed to flow better from MH/SUD staff to PCPs than in the other direction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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9. Integrating Substance Use Disorder Services with Primary Care: The Experience in California.
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Padwa, Howard, Urada, Darren, Antonini, ValerieP., Ober, Allison, Crèvecoeur-MacPhail, DesiréeA., and Rawson, RichardA.
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *HEALTH services administration , *PRIMARY care , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs - Abstract
Integrating substance use disorder (SUD) services with primary care (PC) can improve access to SUD services for the 20.9 million Americans who need SUD treatment but do not receive it, and help prevent the onset of SUDs among the 68 million Americans who use psychoactive substances in a risky manner. We lay out the reasons for integrating SUD and PC services and then explore the models used and the experiences of providers as they have begun SUD/PC integration in California. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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10. The California Integration Learning Collaborative: A Forum to Address Challenges of SUD-Primary Care Service Integration.
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Antonini, ValerieP., Oeser, BrandyT., and Urada, Darren
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,COORDINATION (Human services) ,HEALTH services administration ,PRIMARY health care - Abstract
The California Substance Use Disorder (SUD)/Health Care Integration Learning Collaborative (CILC) aims to provide an interactive forum where county administrators, SUD provider organization representatives, and other key stakeholders can collaborate to identify successful models and processes for SUD integration into primary health care, as well as common barriers and solutions. We present the topics discussed within the CILC that have focused on common barriers to SUD and health care integration (documentation/data privacy, financing, and partnering with primary care providers). This article describes the discussions, presentations, and lessons learned from the CILC addressing each of these three barriers. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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11. Differential Outcomes of Court-Supervised Substance Abuse Treatment Among California Parolees and Probationers.
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Evans, Elizabeth, Jaffe, Adi, Urada, Darren, and Anglin, M. Douglas
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PAROLEES ,PAROLE ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,PROBATION - Abstract
To explore the effectiveness of court-supervised drug treatment for California parolees, offender characteristics, treatment experiences, and outcomes were examined and contrasted to those of probationers. The analysis used statewide administrative data on 4,507 parolees and 22,701 probationers referred to treatment by Proposition 36 during fiscal year 2006-2007. Compared with probationers, parolee problems were more severe at treatment entry, more were treated in residential settings, treatment retention was shorter, and fewer completed treatment. Regarding outcomes, fewer parolees were successful at treatment discharge and more recidivated over 12-months post admission. Both groups improved in many areas by treatment discharge, but improvements were generally smaller among parolees. Significant interaction effects indicated that parolees benefited from residential care and more treatment days, even after controlling for covariates. Court-supervised drug treatment for parolees can “work;” however, parolees have more frequent and diverse needs, and their outcomes are enhanced by more intensive treatment. Findings suggest methods for optimizing the effectiveness of criminal-justice–supervised programs for treating drug-dependent offenders. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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12. Band-Aids and Bullhorns: Why California’s Drug Policy Is Failing and What We Can Do to Fix It.
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Gardiner, Christine, Urada, Darren, and Anglin, M. Douglas
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SUBSTANCE abuse policy , *CRIME prevention laws , *DRUG abuse treatment -- Finance , *STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
California voters had high hopes when they passed the Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act of 2000 (SACPA, a.k.a. Proposition 36). The law, one of the most extensive diversion-to-treatment laws to date, was intended to divert and treat 36,000 drug offenders annually. Unfortunately the law has not lived up to voter or practitioner expectations. Insufficient funding derailed the legislation by making it impossible to provide offenders either appropriate substance abuse treatment or adequate probation supervision. Stakeholders expressed consternation with aspects of the legislation that, in their view, led to SACPA being less successful than it could have been. Specifically, the universal application of the treatment-in-lieu-of-incarceration law forced stakeholders to accommodate offenders unmotivated-to-change and unsuitable for many treatment settings; and prohibiting shock incarceration removed a deterrent to violating program rules. Based on information gathered through stakeholder surveys and interviews, four policy recommendations are offered to improve the effectiveness of SACPA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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13. Do cultural and linguistic competence matter in Latinos' completion of mandated substance abuse treatment?
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Guerrero, Erick G, Campos, Michael, Urada, Darren, and Yang, Joy C
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,HISPANIC Americans ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SPANISH language - Abstract
Background: Increasing evidence suggests that culturally and linguistically responsive programs may improve substance abuse treatment outcomes among Latinos. However, little is known about whether individual practices or culturally and linguistically responsive contexts support efforts by first-time Latino clients to successfully complete mandated treatment. Methods: We analyzed client and program data from publicly funded treatment programs contracted through the criminal justice system in California. A sample of 5,150 first-time Latino clients nested within 48 treatment programs was analyzed using multilevel logistic regressions. Results: Outpatient treatment, homelessness, and a high frequency of drug use at intake were associated with decreased odds of treatment completion among Latinos. Programs that routinely offered a culturally and linguistically responsive practice-namely, Spanish-language translation-were associated with increased odds of completion of mandated treatment. Conclusions: These preliminary findings suggest that concrete practices such as offering Spanish translation improve treatment adherence within a population that is at high risk of treatment dropout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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14. Treatment Outcomes for Methamphetamine Users: California Proposition 36 and Comparison Clients.
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Brecht, Mary-Lynn and Urada, Darren
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METHAMPHETAMINE abuse , *CRIMINALS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Methamphetamine (meth) is a major drug of abuse in California and several other states, particularly among criminal offender populations. Over the past decade, substance abuse treatment systems have had to adapt to and accommodate the increasing needs of meth users and, in California, deal with the impact of Proposition 36, which has resulted in a greater number of criminal offend- ers entering the treatment system. This study examines selected treatment performance and outcome indicators for California Proposition 36 offenders entering substance abuse treatment for meth use and compares their performance and outcomes to other subgroups of California treatment clients differenti- ated by whether or not they were admitted to treatment through Proposition 36 and whether or not their primary substance was meth. Significant improvements in all outcome domains were seen across the populations, and treatment performance and outcomes were not substantively inferior for the offender or meth-using groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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15. Editors' Introduction: Identifying and Assessing Promising Practices for Criminal Justice Clients California Substance Abuse Research Consortium (SARC) Meetings, 2010.
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Urada, Darren, Rutkowski, Beth A., Rawson, Richard A., and Freese, Thomas E.
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *TRAINING of correctional personnel - Abstract
Although some practices clearly have stronger supporting evidence than others, a single authoritative list of evidence-based practices (EBPs) that can be applied in the treatment of criminal justice clients does not exist. Nationally. use of EBPs is low, and such practices are generally only implemented under certain circumstances. To clarify these issues, experts from around the nation were invited to California for two research-to-policy meetings focused on EBP identification and implemen- tation. Their presentations and the resulting series of articles in this special theme issue describe the current state of EBP research for criminal justice clients. To advance the field beyond the compilation of EBP lists, which can only represent a partial solution at best, next steps should include a greater focus on quality of implementation. intensity of quality assurance and monitoring, and training for underlying skills and principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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16. Treating Opioid Use Under California's Proposition 36: Differential Outcomes by Treatment Modality.
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Conner, Bradley T., Hampton, Ashley S., Hunter, Jeremy, and Urada, Darren
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OPIOID abuse ,DRUG abuse treatment ,METHADONE abuse ,TREATMENT of drug addiction ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment - Abstract
In California, Proposition 36 (Prop. 36) has led to positive outcomes for a significant pro- portion of participants-increases in drug treatment completion, reduced drug use and recidivism, and increased employment. However, there are notable differences in outcomes among Prop. 36 subgroups, with some of the poorest Outcomes observed among opioid users. This may be because very few Prop. 36 opioid users were placed in narcotic treatment programs (NTPs). Prop. 36 opioid users who were placed in NTPs using methadone had the greatest reductions in opioid use from treatment intake to discharge, as compared to Prop. 36 opioid users who received outpatient drug-free or residential treat- ment. As such, NTPs should be considered to be a highly efficacious and viable treatment option for Prop. 36 opioid users. Thus, to improve treatment outcomes among Prop. 36 opioid users, it is essential that the provision and utilization of NTPs be enhanced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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17. STAKEHOLDER CONSENSUS AND CIRCUMVENTION IN DRUG DIVERSION PROGRAMS: FINDINGS FROM CALIFORNIA'S SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND CRIME PREVENTION ACT (PROPOSITION 36).
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URADA, DARREN, GARDINER, CHRISTINE, and ANGLIN, M. DOUGLAS
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SUBSTANCE abuse prevention , *CRIME prevention , *STAKEHOLDERS , *BUDGET cuts , *IMPRISONMENT , *DATABASES , *SURVEYS , *INTERVIEWING , *PAROLEES , *PUBLIC prosecutors , *PROBATION - Abstract
Nearly 50,000 drug offenders are annually offered treatment in lieu of traditional sentencing as a result of California's voter-approved Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act (SACPA). The challenges SACPA currently faces and their potential solutions may be similar to those faced by diversion programs in other regions. Stakeholders responsible for SACPA implementation were surveyed about the impact of recent budget cuts and were asked for suggestions on how to improve SACPA. Budget cuts undermined portions of the law that stakeholders agreed with and stakeholders themselves sought to circumvent portions of the law that they disagreed with. However, two areas of broad stakeholder agreement emerged: 1) funding should be increased, and 2) the option of brief jail sanctions for noncompliant participants should be made available. To address current challenges, key stakeholder groups should collectively draft and propose a revised version of the law using these areas of agreement as a foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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18. Improving the Accountability of California's Public Substance Abuse Treatment System through the Implementation of Performance Models.
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Rawson, Richard A., Gonzales, Rachel, Crèvecoeur-MacPhail, Desirée, Urada, Darren, Brecht, Mary-Lynn, Chalk, Mady, Kemp, Jack, and Cunningham, Michael
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,PERFORMANCE standards ,QUALITY of service ,MEDICAL quality control - Abstract
Improving the care for individuals with substance use disorders is a national health policy priority. Like other parts of the health care system, the addiction field is under pressure for higher accountability—more efficient use of treatment resources, the delivery of quality services, and the production of positive client outcomes. This introductory article highlights the importance of the collection of articles being published in this special issue as they describe California's efforts toward making the alcohol and drug (AOD) treatment system more accountable and effective. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2010
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19. Criminal Justice Treatment Admissions for Methamphetamine Use in California: A Focus on Proposition 36.
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Anglin, M. Douglas, Urada, Darren, Brecht, Mary-Lynn, Hawken, Angela, Rawson, Richard, and Longshore, Douglas
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METHAMPHETAMINE , *CRIMINAL justice policy , *CRIME prevention , *CRIMINAL justice agencies , *PERSONALITY disorders , *SMOKING in the workplace , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *ECSTASY (Drug) - Abstract
Methamphetamine (MA) use is considered as one of the nation's most pressing drug problems. In California, MA use has outstripped all other drugs in epidemiological extent, law enforcement activities, and treatment services demand. An opportunity for further study of MA use and its treatment emerged from a change in offender sentencing options introduced by California's Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act of 2000 (SACPA). Results indicate that statewide admissions for MA rose from 8.4% in FY 1992/1993 to 34.6% in FY 2004/2005, a four-fold increase over the 13 years. From the year before SACPA implementation to the year after, the percentage of treatment admissions due to MA use increased from 18.8% to 25.6%, an increase largely due to the fact that SACPA admissions were over 50% MA users. With the exception of alcohol, MA users entering treatment through SACPA had higher completion rates (about one third) from community based treatment than users of other primary drugs. This result held true for demographic and other subgroups of MA users. Multivariate regression results illuminate the relative importance of the variables examined, Implication of the findings for policy, intervention services, and research are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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20. The California Substance Abuse Research Consortium: Origins, History, and Issues.
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Anglin, M.D. and Urada, Darren
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *STATISTICS - Abstract
Provides a summary snapshot of the substance abuse situation through the use of substance-related statistics and regional reports in California. Accounts on the changing nature of drug problem; Discussion of the natural history of alcohol and drug involvements; Development of substance abuse disorders.
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- 2003
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21. Editor's Introduction.
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Rawson, Richard, Urada, Darren, and Finnerty, Beth
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DRUG abuse , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *CRIMINAL justice system , *BUPRENORPHINE , *MORPHINE derivatives - Abstract
On May 13 and 14, 2003, the 31St California Substance Abuse Research Consortium meeting brought an impressive array of researchers, alcohol and drug administrators and staff, law enforcement personnel, criminal justice and social service agency staff, treatment practitioners, and policymakers to Sacramento. Together, these participants engaged in a highly informative and productive discussion of current substance abuse research, practice, and policies in the state of California. The drug's properties and tools for the training of practitioners in the treatment applications of buprenorphine were discussed in order to promote an informed approach to the use of this exciting new tool. The second special topic was substance abuse and crime, which continues to be an area of intense public interest as well as an area of vibrant discussion and development in policy, practice, and research. The full second day of the meeting was devoted to this topic. All presenters at the May 2003 meeting were invited to submit articles based on their research presentations.
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- 2004
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22. Adult use cannabis legalization and cannabis use disorder treatment in California, 2010–2021.
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Bass, Brittany, Padwa, Howard, Khurana, Dhruv, Urada, Darren, and Boustead, Anne
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *THERAPEUTICS , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *TIME series analysis , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *RACE , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *DRUG laws , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *ADULTS - Abstract
Many nations and jurisdictions have legalized non-medical adult use of cannabis, or are considering doing so. This paper contributes to knowledge of adult use legalization's associations with cannabis use disorder (CUD) treatment utilization. This study collected data from a dataset of all publicly funded substance use disorder treatment delivered in California from 2010 to 2021 (1,460,066 episodes). A logistic regression model estimates adult use legalization's impacts on CUD treatment utilization using an individual-level pre-post time series model, including individual and county-level characteristics and county and year-fixed effects. Adult use legalization was associated with a significant decrease in the probability of admission to CUD treatment (average marginal effect (AME): −0.005, 95 % CI: −0.009, 0.000). Adult use legalization was also associated with a decrease in the probability of admission to CUD treatment for males (AME: −0.025, 95 % CI: −0.027, −0.023) Medi-Cal beneficiaries (AME: −0.025, 95 % CI: −0.027, −0.023) adults ages 21+ (AME: −0.011, 95 % CI: −0.014, −0.009) and Whites (AME: −0.012, 95 % CI: −0.015, −0.010), and an increase in the probability of admission to CUD treatment for patients referred from the criminal justice system (AME: 0.017, 95 % CI: 0.015, 0.020) and Blacks (AME: 0.004, 95 % CI: 0.000, 0.007) and Hispanics (AME: 0.009, 95 % CI: 0.006, 0.011). Adult use legalization is associated with declining CUD treatment admissions, even though cannabis-related problems are becoming more prevalent. Policies and practices that protect public health, and engage people with CUD in treatment are needed. • Pre-legalization, 19 % of SUD admissions were CUD, compared to 9 % post-legalization. • Adult use legalization was associated with a decrease in CUD treatment admissions. • Differences existed in legalization's associations on different demographic groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Preliminary results of the evaluation of the California Hub and Spoke Program.
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Darfler, Kendall, Sandoval, José, Pearce Antonini, Valerie, and Urada, Darren
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OPIOID abuse , *OPIOIDS , *TECHNICAL assistance , *TREATMENT programs - Abstract
In August 2017, California launched the Hub and Spoke Program to address the growing number of opioid overdose deaths in the state. The program connects opioid treatment programs ("hubs") with office based opioid treatment settings, like primary care clinics ("spokes") to build a network of treatment expertise and referral resources. A key objective of this program is to expand access to medications for opioid use disorders (MOUD), with a particular focus on getting more buprenorphine into spokes. This article describes the preliminary results of the evaluation of the California Hub and Spoke program. Using a mixed methods approach, this portion of the evaluation measures changes in numbers of MOUD patients and providers, and barriers and facilitators to implementation. Findings reveal that, in the first 15 months of the program, 3480 new patients started buprenorphine in 118 spokes, increasing treatment initiations by 94.7% over baseline. The number of waivered spoke providers also increased 52.4% to 268. Although these data demonstrate promising growth in the network, challenges to expanding treatment access remain. Provider activity was among the most notable. Despite growth in the number of spoke providers with waivers to prescribe buprenorphine, only 68.7% (n = 184) were actively prescribing to patients. A survey of providers found that those who were not yet using their waivers lacked the confidence and mentorship they needed to prescribe. Provider knowledge and attitudes toward MOUD, fear of legal consequences, and limited patient outreach were also contributing factors. Recommendations for strengthening Hub and Spoke program implementation include facilitating mentor linkage for prescribers, expanding the support offered to spoke providers, and offering additional training and technical assistance aimed at provider stigma. Efforts to address these recommendations are described in a companion paper (Miele et al., under review). • Spokes nearly doubled their monthly buprenorphine initiation numbers. • Just over two-thirds of waivered providers were prescribing buprenorphine. • Inactive prescribers were less likely to feel they had the mentorship they needed. • Some providers expressed fear over the legal ramifications of prescribing. • Other barriers included limited patient outreach, and lack of community resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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24. Recovery incentives program: California's contingency management benefit.
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Freese, Thomas E., Rutkowski, Beth A., Peck, James A., Urada, Darren, Clark, H. Westley, Bland, Anton Nigusse, Friedman, Joseph, and Rawson, Richard A.
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL care , *DRUG toxicity , *URINALYSIS , *ALASKA Natives , *STORED-value cards - Abstract
The role of methamphetamine and cocaine use in California's drug poisoning (overdose) crisis has dramatically increased in the past five (5) years and has disproportionately affected American Indian, Alaska Native, and Black Californians. No FDA-approved medications currently exist for the treatment of individuals with stimulant use disorder (StimUD). Outside the Veteran's Administration, the Recovery Incentives Program: California's Contingency Management Benefit is the first large scale implementation of contingency management (CM). CM is the behavioral treatment with the most evidence and largest effect sizes for StimUD. The Program uses a CM protocol where participants can receive a maximum of $599 over a six-month period, contingent upon 36 stimulant-negative urine test results. Urine tests are conducted using a set of approved, CLIA-waived, point-of-care urine drug tests (UDTs). To ensure fidelity to the CM protocol and to prevent fraud, waste, and abuse, all aspects of incentive accounting and distribution are managed electronically via a custom-developed software system. Incentive distribution utilizes electronic gift cards. A significant innovation of the project is the conceptualization of the CM Coordinator, a designated and highly trained and supervised individual responsible for all aspects of CM operation in a specific site. The California Department of Health Care Services contracted with UCLA to develop and implement a robust evaluation of the Program; goals include evaluating the effectiveness of real-world implementation and facilitating quality improvement. The project will likely significantly impact the use of CM for StimUD nationally and may well reduce stimulant-related drug poisoning deaths. • California is piloting Medicaid funded Contingency Management in outpatient sites. • Comprehensive training/support is critical to successful real-world implementation. • Pilot uses a robust protocol based on 30+ years of research with stimulant use. • Program evaluation will highlight barriers/facilitators to implementation of CM. • Using dedicated CM Coordinators to conduct service enhances protocol adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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25. The Implementation of Integrated Behavioral Health Protocols In Primary Care Settings in Project Care.
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Padwa, Howard, Teruya, Cheryl, Tran, Elise, Lovinger, Katherine, Antonini, Valerie P., Overholt, Colleen, and Urada, Darren
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- *
MENTAL health services , *PRIMARY care , *SUBSTANCE-induced disorders , *CONTEXTUAL analysis , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *HEALTH planning , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *PRIMARY health care , *MENTAL health services administration - Abstract
Purpose: The majority of adults with mental health (MH) and substance use (SU) disorders in the United States do not receive treatment. The Affordable Care Act will create incentives for primary care centers to begin providing behavioral health (MH and SU) services, thus promising to address the MH and SU treatment gaps. This paper examines the implementation of integrated care protocols by three primary care organizations.Methods: The Behavioral Health Integration in Medical Care (BHIMC) tool was used to evaluate the integrated care capacity of primary care organizations that chose to participate in the Kern County (California) Mental Health Department's Project Care annually for 3years. For a subsample of clinics, change over time was measured. Informed by the Conceptual Model of Evidence-Based Practice Implementation in Public Service Sectors, inner and outer contextual factors impacting implementation were identified and analyzed using multiple data sources and qualitative analytic methods.Results: The primary care organizations all offered partially integrated (PI) services throughout the study period. At baseline, organizations offered minimally integrated/partially integrated (MI/PI) services in the Program Milieu, Clinical Process - Treatment, and Staffing domains of the BHIMC, and scores on all domains were at the partially integrated (PI) level or higher in the first and second follow-ups. Integrated care services emphasized the identification and management of MH more than SU in 52.2% of evaluated domains, but did not emphasize SU more than MH in any of them. Many of the gaps between MH and SU emphases were associated with limited capacities related to SU medications. Several outer (socio-political context, funding, leadership) and inner (organizational characteristics, individual adopter characteristics, leadership, innovation-values fit) contextual factors impacted the development of integrated care capacity.Conclusions: This study of a small sample of primary care organizations showed that it is possible to improve their integrated care capacity as measured by the BHIMC, though it may be difficult or unfeasible for them to provide fully integrated behavioral health services. Integrated services emphasized MH more than SU, and enhancing primary care clinic capacities related to SU medications may help close this gap. Both inner and outer contextual factors may impact integrated service capacity development in primary care clinics. Study findings may be used to inform future research on integrated care and inform the implementation of efforts to enhance integrated care capacity in primary care clinics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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26. Utilization and outcomes of detoxification and maintenance treatment for opioid dependence in publicly-funded facilities in California, USA: 1991–2012.
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Nosyk, Bohdan, Li, Libo, Evans, Elizabeth, Urada, Darren, Huang, David, Wood, Evan, Rawson, Richard, and Hser, Yih-Ing
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OPIOID abuse , *DETOXIFICATION (Substance abuse treatment) , *DRUG administration , *REGRESSION analysis , *DRUG abuse treatment - Abstract
Background California treats the largest population of opioid dependent individuals in the USA and is among a small group of states that applies regulations for opioid treatment that are more stringent than existing federal regulations. We aim to characterize changes in patient characteristics and treatment utilization over time, and identify determinants of successful completion of detoxification and MMT retention in repeated attempts. Methods State-wide administrative data was obtained from California Outcome Measurement System during the period: January 1st, 1991–March 31st, 2012. Short-term detoxification treatment and long-term maintenance treatment, primarily with methadone, was available to study participants. Mixed effects regression models were used to define determinants of successful completion of the detoxification treatment protocol (as classified by treatment staff) and duration of maintenance treatment. Results The study sample consisted of 237,709 unique individuals and 885,971 treatment episodes; 837% were detoxification treatment episodes in 1994, dropping to 40.5% in 2010. Among individuals accessing only detoxification, the adjusted odds of success declined with each successive attempt (vs. 1st attempt: 2nd: OR: 0.679; 95% CI (0.610, 0.755); 3rd: 0.557 (0.484, 0.641); 4th: 0.526 (0.445, 0.622); 5th: 0.407 (0.334, 0.497); ≥6th: 0.339 (0.288, 0.399). For those ever accessing maintenance treatment, later subsequent attempts were longer in duration, and those with two or more prior attempts at detoxification had marginally longer subsequent maintenance episodes (hazard ratio: 0.97; 95% CI: 0.95, 0.99). Finally, only 10.9% of all detoxification episodes were followed by admission into maintenance treatment within 14 days. Conclusions This study has revealed high rates of detoxification treatment for opioid dependence in California throughout the study period, and decreasing odds of success in repeated attempts at detoxification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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27. The effect of treatment for opioid use disorders on the costs of crime.
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Krebs, Emanuel, Huang, David Y.C., Evans, Elizabeth, Urada, Darren, Hser, Yih-Ing, and Nosyk, Bohdan
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DRUG abuse risk factors , *OPIOID abuse , *DRUG abuse treatment , *CRIME prevention , *MORTALITY - Published
- 2017
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28. Health state transitions among prescribed opiate patients accessing pharmacological treatment for opioid dependence in California, 2006–2010.
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Li, Libo, Evans, Elizabeth, Min, Jeong Eun, Liu, Lei, Huang, David Y., Urada, Darren, Wood, Evan, Hser, Yih-Ing, and Nosyk, Bohdan
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- *
OPIOID abuse , *DRUG abuse treatment , *NARCOTICS , *DRUG prescribing , *DRUG therapy , *MEDICAL research - Published
- 2015
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29. Integration of substance use disorder services with primary care: health center surveys and qualitative interviews.
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Urada D, Teruya C, Gelberg L, and Rawson R
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- Adult, Attitude of Health Personnel, California, Female, Health Policy, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Care Surveys, Interviews as Topic, Mental Health Services organization & administration, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Substance-Related Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Background: Each year, nearly 20 million Americans with alcohol or illicit drug dependence do not receive treatment. The Affordable Care Act and parity laws are expected to result in increased access to treatment through integration of substance use disorder (SUD) services with primary care. However, relatively little research exists on the integration of SUD services into primary care settings. Our goal was to assess SUD service integration in California primary care settings and to identify the practice and policy facilitators and barriers encountered by providers who have attempted to integrate these services., Methods: Primary survey and qualitative interview data were collected from the population of federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) in five California counties known to be engaged in SUD integration efforts was surveyed. From among the organizations that responded to the survey (78% response rate), four were purposively sampled based on their level of integration. Interviews were conducted with management, staff, and patients (n=18) from these organizations to collect further qualitative information on the barriers and facilitators of integration., Results: Compared to mental health services, there was a trend for SUD services to be less integrated with primary care, and SUD services were rated significantly less effective. The perceived difference in effectiveness appeared to be due to provider training. Policy suggestions included expanding the SUD workforce that can bill Medicaid, allowing same-day billing of two services, facilitating easier reimbursement for medications, developing the workforce, and increasing community SUD specialty care capacity., Conclusions: Efforts to integrate SUD services with primary care face significant barriers, many of which arise at the policy level and are addressable.
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- 2014
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30. Promising practices for delivery of court-supervised substance abuse treatment: perspectives from six high-performing California counties operating Proposition 36.
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Evans E, Anglin MD, Urada D, and Yang J
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- Adult, California, Community Health Services legislation & jurisprudence, Criminal Law legislation & jurisprudence, Female, Focus Groups, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Program Evaluation methods, Socioeconomic Factors, Community Health Services organization & administration, Criminal Law organization & administration, Policy, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation
- Abstract
Operative for nearly a decade, California's voter-initiated Proposition 36 program offers many offenders community-based substance abuse treatment in lieu of likely incarceration. Research has documented program successes and plans for replication have proliferated, yet very little is known about how the Proposition 36 program works or practices for achieving optimal program outcomes. In this article, we identify policies and practices that key stakeholders perceive to be most responsible for the successful delivery of court-supervised substance abuse treatment to offenders under Proposition 36. Data was collected via focus groups conducted with 59 county stakeholders in six high-performing counties during 2009. Discussion was informed by seven empirical indicators of program performance and outcomes and was focused on identifying and describing elements contributing to success. Program success was primarily attributed to four strategies, those that: (1) fostered program engagement, monitored participant progress, and sustained cooperation among participants; (2) cultivated buy-in among key stakeholders; (3) capitalized on the role of the court and the judge; and (4) created a setting which promoted a high-quality treatment system, utilization of existing resources, and broad financial and political support for the program. Goals and practices for implementing each strategy are discussed. Findings provide a "promising practices" resource for Proposition 36 program evaluation and improvement and inform the design and study of other similar types of collaborative justice treatment efforts., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2011
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31. Evaluation of the Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act: client characteristics, treatment completion and re-offending three years after implementation.
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Evans E, Longshore D, Prendergast M, and Urada D
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- Adult, Age Factors, Amphetamine-Related Disorders epidemiology, Amphetamine-Related Disorders prevention & control, California epidemiology, Central Nervous System Stimulants, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Male, Methamphetamine, Middle Aged, Secondary Prevention, Sex Factors, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Crime legislation & jurisprudence, Crime prevention & control, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
Representing a major shift in criminal justice policy, Proposition 36 became law in November 2000 as the Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act (SACPA), permitting eligible offenders to receive probation with drug treatment instead of probation or incarceration. UCLA's Integrated Substance Abuse Programs was chosen by the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs to conduct an independent evaluation of SACPA. Analysis of the first three years of data provides information on the flow of offenders through SACPA, client and program characteristics, treatment completion rates, and effects on re-offending. Results show that most eligible offenders chose to participate in SACPA; almost two-thirds of these went on to enter treatment. Compared to other treatment clients, SACPA treatment clients included fewer women, were predominately between 26 and 45 years old, were more likely to use methamphetamine, and had been using drugs a longer. Most SACPA clients were referred to outpatient drug-free treatment regardless of primary drug problem, and about one-third completed treatment. Re-offending was lowest among SACPA offenders who completed treatment. Felony and misdemeanor drug arrests were higher among SACPA-era drug offenders than in a similar group of pre-SACPA drug offenders. Future reports will cover possible SACPA cost savings, additional clients outcomes, and overall lessons learned.
- Published
- 2006
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