(Press-News.org) Ann Arbor, June 19, 2023 – De facto decriminalization of drug possession may be a good first step in addressing the disproportionate impact of an overburdened United States criminal justice system on the Black community. According to a new study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, published by Elsevier, this strategy was associated with significant and sustained reductions in low-level arrests. These arrests too often prevent drug users from obtaining needed treatments and services. The findings also suggest that while these policies may effectively reduce the overall arrest toll, striking disparities persist in how police are applying the directives across racial lines – gaps the investigators suggest must be effectively addressed.
The United States incarcerates more of its population than any other nation. Despite similar levels of drug use across the population, the policing and criminal prosecution of drug possession are disproportionately concentrated in Black and low-income communities and have been a key driver of racial disparities within jails and prisons. While some states and localities have passed decriminalization legislation, many jurisdictions are using prosecutorial discretion to enact de facto decriminalization to divert low-level drug users away from prisons, where they are likely to experience poor health outcomes.
Lead investigator Saba Rouhani, PhD, MSc, Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the New York University School of Global Public Health and core faculty at the school’s new Center for Anti-racism, Social Justice and Public Health explained, “We conducted this research because we wanted to examine whether this kind of directive could impact racial disparities in the criminal legal system in Baltimore, a majority Black city with a heavy burden of substance use and racialized policing.”
Investigators analyzed arrest trends from January 2018 to December 2021, before and after a de facto decriminalization policy went into effect in Baltimore. They found that following the policy change in April 2020, there was a significant reduction in low-level drug-related arrests, which continued to decline over time. The vast majority (82%) of the decline occurred in the Black community. While this illustrates a sizable net reduction in drug arrests among Black residents, they also found that the ratio of street arrests in Black compared to non-Black individuals actually increased from 5:1 to 12:1.
Dr. Rouhani commented, “Our analysis of arrests before and after Baltimore enacted a de facto decriminalization of drug possession shows that it holds promise for reducing low-level, drug-related arrests, which disproportionately involve people of color. However, we also observed that racial disparities in drug possession arrests actually widened after the policy change, such that the few people still being arrested for simple drug possession despite the non-prosecution directive were nearly exclusively Black.”
These findings build on earlier studies by the research team that showed that less than 1% of individuals whose warrants and pending charges for drug possession were dropped due to this policy went on to commit more serious offenses in the following year. Together these studies suggest that de facto decriminalization can potentially be enacted to rapidly decrease arrests without resulting in increased incidence of other forms of crime in the community.
The investigators noted that while the COVID-19 pandemic might be in part responsible for the rapid decline in arrests, these levels continued to decline after stay-at-home orders were lifted, suggesting that it could not fully explain the sustained reductions in low-level drug arrests observed. In addition, they did not observe the same magnitude of reductions in other crime categories, which further supported their inference that the policy directive did have some impact on the observed decline in drug arrests.
Dr. Rouhani added, “This research is particularly timely because it evaluates the impacts of a de facto decriminalization approach to examine whether it can reduce arrests in the absence of legislative reform, which is a critical step for understanding whether it can ultimately improve downstream health outcomes like drug overdose. To effectively close the racial disparity gap, jurisdictions must take a closer look at how police discretion may be influencing the implementation of these policy directives. A mobilization of community health and social services is also needed to ensure that individuals diverted out of the criminal legal system can reliably access resources such as housing, employment, and healthcare to improve their long-term health.”
END
De facto decriminalization of drug possession reduces the overall arrest toll on the Black community, although racial disparities persist
This policy holds promise to mitigate the harms of incarceration if gaps are addressed, report investigators in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine
2023-06-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Combatting stress to improve the heart health of the Hispanic/Latino community
2023-06-19
Embargoed until 8am Eastern Time on Monday, June, 19, 2023
DALLAS, June 19, 2023 — Constant or chronic stress can affect overall well-being and may even impact heart health. Chronic stress can lead to increased blood pressure, heart rate and inflammation, which can contribute to developing chronic diseases.[1] The American Heart Association, the leading global voluntary health organization dedicated to fighting heart disease and stroke for all, today launches a new campaign to help the Hispanic/Latino community protect its overall well-being by addressing common stressors that ...
Bridging traditional economics and econophysics
2023-06-19
How do asset markets work? Which stocks behave similarly? Economists, physicists, and mathematicians work intensively to draw a picture but need to learn what is happening outside their discipline. A new paper now builds a bridge.
In a new study, researchers of the Complexity Science Hub highlight the connecting elements between traditional financial market research and econophysics. "We want to create an overview of the models that exist in financial economics and those that researchers in physics and mathematics have developed ...
1 in 6 parents say child reports tummy pain at least monthly but many haven’t consulted with a doctor
2023-06-19
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Tummy aches are common among kids, with one in six parents in a new national poll saying their child experiences them at least once a month.
But not all parents seek professional advice when belly pain becomes a regular occurrence and just one in three are sure they’d know when it might be a sign of a serious problem, according to the University of Michigan Health C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health.
“Tummy complaints are common among children. This type of pain may be a symptom for a range of health issues, but it can be difficult to know if it’s ...
Pandemic took a major, prolonged toll on university students’ mental health, finds study
2023-06-19
Undergraduates at UK universities experienced prolonged and high levels of psychological distress and anxiety during the pandemic, according to a new study, tracking wellbeing over the course of 2020 to 2021.
They also reported significantly lower levels of wellbeing, happiness and life satisfaction compared to pre-pandemic levels.
Published in the British Journal of Educational Studies, the University of Bolton research highlights how the stringent lockdown measures – including ...
Significant acceleration of humanities and social sciences open access through Taylor & Francis and Jisc Transformative Agreement
2023-06-19
The power of transformative agreements (TAs) to drive the transition to open access (OA), especially in the Humanities and Social Sciences, is revealed in a new report published by Taylor & Francis. Accelerating open access in the UK explores in detail the first two years of Taylor & Francis’ OA partnership with the Jisc consortium and how it has boosted the global impact of research from UK institutions.
Supporting Humanities and Social Sciences researchers to publish OA
One of the report’s standout findings is the benefit of the TA for Humanities and Social Science ...
A probiotic could help mitigate mercury absorption in the gut
2023-06-18
Houston, TX – New research by a team at Pennsylvania State University suggests that microbes in the human gut could be harnessed to block absorption of toxic metals like mercury and help the body absorb useful nutritional ones, like iron. The group presents their findings at ASM Microbe 2023, the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
Methylmercury, a neurotoxin, is particularly worrisome, said Daniela Betancurt-Anzola, a graduate student at Penn State who led the new study. It ...
An oral probiotic can treat dry eye disease
2023-06-18
Houston, TX – In a study by a research group at Baylor College of Medicine, oral administration of a commercially available probiotic bacterial strain was found to improve dry eye disease in an animal model. The findings were presented at ASM Microbe 2023, the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
Dry eye, a common condition in which tears produced by the eye can’t keep the eye adequately lubricated, afflicts approximately 1 in 20 people in the United States. It can cause eye stinging and burning, inflammation, blurry vision and light sensitivity. Extreme cases can result in damage ...
People with alcohol use disorder impaired after heavy drinking, despite claims of higher tolerance
2023-06-18
While heavy drinkers can tolerate a certain amount of alcohol better than light or moderate drinkers, the concept of “holding your liquor” is more nuanced than commonly believed, according to new research from the University of Chicago.
The researchers conducted the study with three groups of young adults in their 20s with different drinking patterns. They found that drinkers with alcohol use disorder (or AUD, traditionally known as alcoholism) displayed less impairment on fine motor and cognitive tasks than light or heavy social drinkers after consuming a standard intoxicating dose—equivalent ...
Social isolation linked to reduced bone quality in males, mouse study finds
2023-06-18
Social isolation may negatively impact bone health, suggests a study conducted in mice being presented Sunday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Ill.
“Social isolation is a potent form of psychosocial stress and is a growing public health concern, particularly among older adults,” said lead researcher Rebecca Mountain, Ph.D., of MaineHealth Institute for Research in Scarborough, Maine. “Even prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has significantly increased the prevalence of isolation and loneliness, researchers have been concerned about a rising ‘epidemic ...
Prompt testosterone treatment improves mental health of transgender, gender-diverse people
2023-06-18
Receiving rapid access to testosterone therapy reduced feelings of gender dysphoria and led to a clinically significant reduction in depression as well as a 50% reduction in suicidality among transgender and gender diverse adults, according to research being presented Sunday at ENDO 2023, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Ill.
“This is the world-first randomized clinical trial supporting the significant benefits of testosterone in reducing gender dysphoria, depression and suicidality in trans individuals desiring commencement of testosterone,” said Brendan Nolan, M.B.B.S., F.R.A.C.P., a Ph.D. candidate at ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Yes, in my back yard: people who live near large-scale solar projects are happy to have more built nearby
Easily attach nanoparticles like toy blocks for industrial use!
LEGO improves maths and spatial ability in the classroom
Despite overall progress, low birthweight rates still high in certain Indian states
Train teachers on how to get parents involved in children’s learning, say researchers
Evolution made us cheats, now free-riders run the world and we need to change, new book warns
Report outlines blueprint to grow Australia’s bioeconomy
Medicaid cuts in the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" could undermine the coverage, financial well-being, medical care, and health of low-income Americans, and lead to more than 16,500 medically-preventab
Groundbreaking TACIT algorithm offers new promise in diagnosing, treating cancer
Long-term study reveals Native seeding controls annual, but not perennial, invasive plants in sand grassland restoration
Printed energy storage charges into the future with MXene inks
Exposure to low levels of arsenic in public drinking water linked to lower birthweight, preterm birth, study finds
AMS Science Preview: Gun violence & weather; NOAA flights improve hurricane forecasts; atmospheric rivers and radio waves
New strategy for the treatment of severe childhood cancer
Krill fishing in the Antarctic: overlaps with consequences
Link found between mitochondria and MS brain damage
More family doctors near retirement, raising concern about future of primary care
Feeding smarter: mannanase improves broiler growth even with less soy and energy
Sports arenas — the importance of politics, fan response and public money
Mapping the genetic landscape of yellow catfish for sustainable aquaculture
Effect of respiratory phase on three-dimensional quantitative parameters of pulmonary subsolid nodules in low-dose computed tomography screening for lung cancer
USC-led team sheds light on dark matter by simulating twins of our Milky Way galaxy
Researchers identify previously uncharacterized gene necessary for DNA repair
Clearing out the clutter: how people retain important information from memories
High blood pressure in pregnancy linked to increased risk of seizure in children
SwRI’s Angel Wileman named one of Women in Hydrogen 50 for 2025
XXIX Brazilian Congress of Nutrology
Life expectancy of American Indian and Alaska Native persons and underreporting of mortality in vital statistics
Official US records underestimate Native Americans deaths and life expectancy
Father’s mental health plays key role in child development, research shows
[Press-News.org] De facto decriminalization of drug possession reduces the overall arrest toll on the Black community, although racial disparities persistThis policy holds promise to mitigate the harms of incarceration if gaps are addressed, report investigators in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine