(Press-News.org) COLUMBIA, Mo. – Statistics show that the amount of older adults in the criminal justice system has quadrupled in the past 15 years. Many of the adults have histories of mental health problems and are being placed in court-based treatment programs, where government officials and social workers tend to think that they are more likely to experience success compared to their younger counterparts. However, new research by Kelli Canada, assistant professor in the University of Missouri School of Social Work, shows that although mental health court participants older than 50 adhere to treatment programs better than younger adults, they are just as likely to be reincarcerated or relapse into criminal behavior.
"Caseworkers often view older adults in mental health courts as more willing to follow guidelines, attend counseling and less likely to violate parole," Canada said. "However, empirical data shows that older adults experience the same substance use, housing instability and risk for reincarceration compared to younger adults."
Mental health courts are intensive treatment programs designed to address individuals' underlying mental problems that contribute to their criminal behaviors. Mental health courts divert criminal offenders from prison into treatment programs, where the emphasis is on mental health assessment, individualized treatment plans and ongoing judicial monitoring.
Canada said that it can be dangerous for court officials to assume that older adults in mental health courts will have better outcomes. Additionally, critics of court-based programs might question the programs' usefulness when participants, who are thought to be at a lower level of risk, relapse or are reincarcerated.
"We need to stop thinking of age as a protective factor in the criminal justice system and mental health courts," Canada said. "We need to make sure individuals receive full assessments of how the program can help them. If older adults are perceived to have lower risk of substance abuse or reincarceration, the treatment teams might not address their needs as thoroughly and effectively."
Canada's study, "Psychosocial and Reincarceration Risks Among Older Adults in Mental Health Courts," appeared in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. Canada's co-researchers included Eunyoung Jang, a social work doctoral student at MU, and Malitta Engstrom from the University of Pennsylvania. The School of Social Work is part of the MU College of Human Environmental Sciences.
INFORMATION:
Age does not predict success for those in court-based mental health treatment programs
Older adults in treatment programs experience the same challenges as younger participants
2014-04-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
TGen identifies growth factor receptors that may prompt metastatic spread of lung cancer
2014-04-09
PHOENIX, Ariz. — April 9, 2014 — Two cell surface receptors might be responsible for the most common form of lung cancer spreading to other parts of the body, according to a study led by the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen).
The hepatocyte growth factor receptor (HGFR/MET) and fibroblast growth factor-inducible 14 (FN14) are proteins associated with the potential spread of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), according to the TGen study published online April 8 by the scientific journal Clinical & Experimental Metastasis.
NSCLC represents more than 85 ...
Are chromium supplements helpful in lowering blood sugar levels?
2014-04-09
Coral Gables, FL (April 9, 2014) -- Approximately 26 percent of the U.S. population has impaired fasting glucose, which is a predisposition for developing type 2 diabetes, and chromium supplementation has been suggested as a method that may help control and prevent the disease.
A new study by a University of Miami (UM) researcher analyses nearly three decades of data on the effect of chromium supplementation on blood sugar and concludes that chromium supplements are not effective at lowering fasting blood sugar in healthy individuals, or diabetics.
Chromium is a mineral ...
Emerging research suggests a new paradigm for 'unconventional superconductors'
2014-04-09
An international team of scientists has reported the first experimental observation of the quantum critical point (QCP) in the extensively studied "unconventional superconductor" TiSe2, finding that it does not reside as predicted within the superconducting dome of the phase diagram, but rather at a full GPa higher in pressure.
The surprising result, reported in Nature Physics, suggests that the emergence of superconductivity in TiSe2 isn't associated with the melting of a charge density wave (CDW), as prevailing theory holds; in fact the CDW's amplitude decreases under ...
The motion of the medium matters for self-assembling particles, Penn research shows
2014-04-09
By attaching short sequences of single-stranded DNA to nanoscale building blocks, researchers can design structures that can effectively build themselves. The building blocks that are meant to connect have complementary DNA sequences on their surfaces, ensuring only the correct pieces bind together as they jostle into one another while suspended in a test tube.
Now, a University of Pennsylvania team has made a discovery with implications for all such self-assembled structures.
Earlier work assumed that the liquid medium in which these DNA-coated pieces float ...
New climate pragmatism framework prioritizes energy access to drive innovation/development
2014-04-09
Drastically improved efforts to provide modern energy access to the poor opens up a new approach to development efforts and action on climate change, an international group of energy and environment scholars say in a new report, Our High-Energy Planet. The report is the first of three in the Climate Pragmatism project, a partnership of Arizona State University's Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes (CSPO) and The Breakthrough Institute.
"Climate change can't be solved on the backs of the world's poorest people," said Daniel Sarewitz, a report coauthor and co-director ...
Vigilance for kidney problems key for rheumatoid arthritis patients
2014-04-09
Rochester, Minn. — Rheumatoid arthritis patients are likelier than the average person to develop chronic kidney disease, and more severe inflammation in the first year of rheumatoid arthritis, corticosteroid use, high blood pressure and obesity are among the risk factors, new Mayo Clinic research shows. Physicians should test rheumatoid arthritis patients periodically for signs of kidney problems, and patients should work to keep blood pressure under control, avoid a high-salt diet, and eliminate or scale back medications damaging to the kidneys, says senior author Eric ...
Researchers discover dangerous ways computer worms are spreading among smartphones
2014-04-09
VIDEO:
Professor Kevin Du and his team at Syracuse University have identified apps that could cause problems for smartphone users, allowing hackers easy access to sensitive information.
Click here for more information.
Professor Kevin Du and a team of researchers from the College of Engineering and Computer Science at Syracuse University have recently discovered that some of the most common activities among smartphone users—scanning 2D barcodes, finding free Wi-Fi access points, ...
Stanford scientists model a win-win situation: Growing crops on photovoltaic farms
2014-04-09
Growing agave and other carefully chosen plants amid photovoltaic panels could allow solar farms not only to collect sunlight for electricity but also to produce crops for biofuels, according to new computer models by Stanford scientists.
This co-location approach could prove especially useful in sunny, arid regions such as the southwestern United States where water is scarce, said Sujith Ravi, who is conducting postdoctoral research with professors David Lobell and Chris Field, both on faculty in environmental Earth system science and senior fellows at the Stanford Woods ...
Medication therapy management works for some but not all home health patients
2014-04-09
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Low-risk Medicare patients entering home health care who received medication therapy management by phone were three times less likely to be hospitalized within the next two months, while those at greater risk saw no benefit, according to a study led by Purdue University.
The study helped determine which patients benefit most from medication therapy management by phone and a way to identify them through a standardized risk score, said Alan Zillich, associate professor of pharmacy practice at Purdue, who led the research.
"Hopefully, this study ...
UC-led research finds chips with olestra cause body toxins to dip
2014-04-09
According to a clinical trial led by University of Cincinnati researchers, a snack food ingredient called olestra has been found to speed up the removal of toxins in the body.
Results are reported in the April edition of the Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry.
The trial demonstrated that olestra—a zero-calorie fat substitute found in low-calorie snack foods such as Pringles—could reduce the levels of serum polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in people who had been exposed to PCBs.
High levels of PCBs in the body are associated with an increase in hypertension and diabetes. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Study links America’s favorite cooking oil to obesity
Famous Easter Island statues were created without centralized management
Captive male Asian elephants can live together peacefully and with little stress, if introduced slowly and carefully, per Laos case study of 8 unrelated males
The Galapagos and other oceanic islands and Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) may be "critical" refuges for sharks in the Tropical Eastern Pacific, as predatory fish appear depleted in more coastal MPAs t
Why are shiny colours rare yet widespread in nature?
Climate-vulnerable districts of India face significantly higher risks of adverse health outcomes, including 25% higher rates of underweight children
New study reveals spatial patterns of crime rates and media coverage across Chicago
Expanding seasonal immunization access could minimize off-season RSV epidemics
First-of-its-kind 3D model lets you explore Easter Island statues up close
foldable and rollable interlaced origami structure: Folds and rolls up for storage and deploys with high strength
Possible therapeutic approach to treat diabetic nerve damage discovered
UBC ‘body-swap’ robot helps reveal how the brain keeps us upright
Extensive survey of Eastern tropical Pacific finds remote protected areas harbor some of the highest concentrations of sharks
High risk of metastatic recurrence among young cancer patients
Global Virus Network statement on the Marburg virus outbreak in Ethiopia
'Exploitative' online money gaming in India causing financial, health and social harm, analysis shows
Mayo Clinic researchers identify why some lung tumors respond well to immunotherapy
The pterosaur rapidly evolved flight abilities, in contrast to modern bird ancestors, new study suggests
Farms could be our secret climate weapon, QUT-led study finds
New research by ASU paleoanthropologists gives valuable insight into how two ancient human ancestors coexisted in the same area
Therapeutic use of cannabis and cannabinoids
‘Cognitive Legos’ help the brain build complex behaviors
From inhibition to destruction – kinase drugs found to trigger protein degradation
Diamond defects, now in pairs, reveal hidden fluctuations in the quantum world
Metastatic recurrence among adolescents and young adults with cancer
Disrupted federal funding for extramural cancer research
Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and chronic cough
The 2025 Los Angeles wildfires and outpatient acute health care utilization
Why watching someone get hurt on screen makes you wince
Data-driven surgical supply lists can reduce hospital cost and waste
[Press-News.org] Age does not predict success for those in court-based mental health treatment programsOlder adults in treatment programs experience the same challenges as younger participants



