PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Treatment of mental illness lowers arrest rates, saves money

2013-06-10
(Press-News.org) Research from North Carolina State University, the Research Triangle Institute (RTI) and the University of South Florida shows that outpatient treatment of mental illness significantly reduces arrest rates for people with mental health problems and saves taxpayers money.

"This study shows that providing mental health care is not only in the best interest of people with mental illness, but in the best interests of society," says Dr. Sarah Desmarais, an assistant professor of psychology at NC State and co-author of a paper describing the research.

The researchers wanted to determine the extent to which treating mental illness can keep people with mental health problems out of trouble with the law. It is well established that people with mental health problems, such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, make up a disproportionate percentage of defendants, inmates and others who come into contact with the criminal justice system.

The researchers identified 4,056 people who had been hospitalized for mental illness in 2004 or 2005 and then tracked them from 2005 to 2012. The researchers were able to determine which individuals were receiving government-subsidized medication and which were receiving government-subsidized outpatient services, such as therapy. The researchers were also able to determine who was arrested during the seven-year study period.

"Our research shows that people receiving medication were significantly less likely to be arrested," Desmarais says. "Outpatient services also resulted in a decreased likelihood of arrest."

The researchers also compared criminal justice costs with mental health treatment costs. Individuals who were arrested received less treatment and each cost the government approximately $95,000 during the study period. Individuals who were not arrested received more treatment and each cost the government approximately $68,000 during the study period.

"It costs about $10 less per day to provide treatment and prevent crime. That's a good investment," Desmarais says.

### The paper, "Effects of Outpatient Treatment on Risk of Arrest of Adults With Serious Mental Illness and Associated Costs," was published online May 15 in the journal Psychiatric Services. Lead author of the paper is Dr. Richard Van Dorn of RTI. Co-authors include John Petrila, Diane Haynes and Dr. Jay Singh of the University of South Florida. The research was supported by the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How Archaea might find their food

2013-06-10
The microorganism Methanosarcina acetivorans lives off everything it can metabolize into methane. How it finds its sources of energy, is not yet clear. Scientists at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum together with colleagues from Dresden, Frankfurt, Muelheim and the USA have identified a protein that might act as a "food sensor". They characterized the molecule in detail and found both similarities and differences to the system that is responsible for the search for food in bacteria. The team reports in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. MsmS has a different function to that ...

Eww! Only 5 percent of us wash hands correctly

2013-06-10
VIDEO: A study by Michigan State University researchers found that only 5 percent of people who used the bathroom washed their hands long enough to kill the germs that can cause... Click here for more information. EAST LANSING, Mich. — Remember Mom's advice about washing your hands thoroughly after using the restroom? Apparently not. A new study by Michigan State University researchers found that only 5 percent of people who used the bathroom washed their hands long ...

Split liver transplants for young children proven to be as safe as whole organ transplantation

2013-06-10
Boston, Mass.— A new study shows that when a liver from a deceased adult or adolescent donor is split into two separate portions for transplantation—with the smaller portion going to a young child and the larger to an adult—the smaller portion used for the child will last just as long as if the child had received a whole organ from a donor close to his size. The data, collected and analyzed by a team led by Boston Children's Hospital researchers Heung Bae Kim, MD, and Ryan Cauley, MD, MPH, was published online in Liver Transplantation, a journal of the American Association ...

Research shows river dredging reduced fish numbers, diversity

2013-06-10
Comparing dredged and undredged sections of the Allegheny River, reduced populations of fish and less variety of aquatic life occurred in areas where gravel extraction took place, according to researchers in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences,. The researchers investigated navigation pools 7 and 8 near Kittanning and Templeton and published their results in the journal Freshwater Biology. "Understanding and untangling the complex effects of human activities on aquatic ecosystems present a challenge to ecologists and resource managers," said lead investigator ...

Mysterious monument found beneath the Sea of Galilee

2013-06-10
The shores of the Sea of Galilee, located in the North of Israel, are home to a number of significant archaeological sites. Now researchers from Tel Aviv University have found an ancient structure deep beneath the waves as well. Researchers stumbled upon a cone-shaped monument, approximately 230 feet in diameter, 39 feet high, and weighing an estimated 60,000 tons, while conducting a geophysical survey on the southern Sea of Galilee, reports Prof. Shmulik Marco of TAU's Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences. The team also included TAU Profs. Zvi Ben-Avraham ...

People are overly confident in their own knowledge, despite errors

2013-06-10
Overprecision — excessive confidence in the accuracy of our beliefs — can have profound consequences, inflating investors' valuation of their investments, leading physicians to gravitate too quickly to a diagnosis, even making people intolerant of dissenting views. Now, new research confirms that overprecision is a common and robust form of overconfidence driven, at least in part, by excessive certainty in the accuracy of our judgments. The research, conducted by researchers Albert Mannes of The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and Don Moore of the Haas ...

How cells get a skeleton

2013-06-10
The mechanism responsible for generating part of the skeletal support for the membrane in animal cells is not yet clearly understood. Now, Jean-François Joanny from the Physico Chemistry Curie Unit at the Curie Institute in Paris and colleagues have found that a well-defined layer beneath the cell outer membrane forms beyond a certain critical level of stress generated by motor proteins within the cellular system. These findings, which offer a new understanding of the formation of this so-called cortical layer, have just been published in EPJ E. Active gels are ideal ...

When will my computer understand me?

2013-06-10
It's not hard to tell the difference between the "charge" of a battery and criminal "charges." But for computers, distinguishing between the various meanings of a word is difficult. For more than 50 years, linguists and computer scientists have tried to get computers to understand human language by programming semantics as software. Driven initially by efforts to translate Russian scientific texts during the Cold War (and more recently by the value of information retrieval and data analysis tools), these efforts have met with mixed success. IBM's Jeopardy-winning Watson ...

Frequent binge drinking is associated with insomnia symptoms in older adults

2013-06-10
DARIEN, IL – A new study suggests that frequent binge drinking is associated with insomnia symptoms in older adults. Results show that overall, 26.2 percent of participants had two or less binge drinking days per week, on average, and 3.1 percent had more than two days per week, on average. After adjustment for demographic variables, medical conditions, and elevated depressive symptoms, participants who binged on an average of more than two days a week had an 84 percent greater odds of reporting an insomnia symptom compared to non-binge drinkers. "It was somewhat surprising ...

The diabetes 'breathalyzer'

2013-06-10
PITTSBURGH—Diabetes patients often receive their diagnosis after a series of glucose-related blood tests in hospital settings, and then have to monitor their condition daily through expensive, invasive methods. But what if diabetes could be diagnosed and monitored through cheaper, noninvasive methods? Chemists at the University of Pittsburgh have demonstrated a sensor technology that could significantly simplify the diagnosis and monitoring of diabetes through breath analysis alone. Their findings were published in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Chemical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Current antivirals likely less effective against severe infection caused by bird flu virus in cows’ milk

Lassa fever vaccine enters phase 1 clinical trial

Institute for Healthcare Improvement Honors Hebrew SeniorLife’s Orchard Cove and NewBridge on the Charles

Dialing in the temperature needed for precise nuclear timekeeping

Fewer than half of Medicaid managed care plans provide all FDA-approved medications for alcohol use disorder

Mount Sinai researchers specific therapy that teaches patients to tolerate stomach and body discomfort improved functional brain deficits linked to visceral disgust that can cause of food avoidance in

New ACP guideline recommends combination therapy for acute episodic migraines

Last supper of 15-million-year-old freshwater fish

Slow, silent ‘scream’ of epithelial cells detected for first time

How big brains and flexible skulls led to the evolution of modern birds

Iguanas floated one-fifth of the way around the world to colonize Fiji

‘Audible enclaves’ could enable private listening without headphones

Twisting atomically thin materials could advance quantum computers

Impaired gastric myoelectrical rhythms associated with altered autonomic functions in patients with severe ischemic stroke

American College of Cardiology issues concise clinical guidance on evaluation and management of cardiogenic shock

Psychological prehabilitation improves surgical recovery, study finds

Neighborhood dispute among cells: Whichever successfully exerts force wins

Deadline extended for the fifth edition of the SWIM Award for Science Journalism

Unique dove species is the dodo of the Caribbean and in similar danger of dying out

Free University Brussels (VUB) opens its doors to censored American researchers

Neuroanatomy that sets humans apart from other primates

Stress and sex influence traumatic brain injury outcomes

Study: suppressing key protein may unlock immunotherapy for Glioblastoma

Early surgical intervention in children with sleep-disordered breathing reduces need for doctor visits, prescriptions

Statin use and risk of hepatocellular carcinoma and liver fibrosis in chronic liver disease

Gender-affirming hormone therapy and depressive symptoms among transgender adults

Surgery in kids with mild sleep-disordered breathing tied to fewer doctor visits, meds

Magnetic microalgae on a mission to become robots

Impact journals to participate at the AACR Annual Meeting 2025

Webb telescope captures its first direct images of carbon dioxide outside solar system

[Press-News.org] Treatment of mental illness lowers arrest rates, saves money