Measurement and instrumentation |
This dimension is concerned with the breadth and quality of instruments that a correctional agency uses to identify the strengths, weaknesses, and service needs of substance-using offenders. Nine domains have been identified as being fundamental to a high quality assessment of offenders with substance use disorders:
History and patterns of substance abuse
History of and engagement in drug treatment
Motivation for treatment
History of mental illness
Suitability for pharmacological treatment
Medical history
HIV/AIDS status and risk factors
Criminal behavior
Criminogenic risk factors
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In addition to focusing on the comprehensiveness of the assessment, this dimension is also concerned with the psychometric properties of the instruments. |
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Integration with the case plan |
This dimension is concerned with the extent to which the correctional case plan explicitly addresses each of the nine assessment domains. It also seeks to gauge efficacy and suitability to the needs of the offender as called for in the written problem statement, goals, objectives, and suggested interventions. |
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Conveyance and utility |
This dimension is concerned with the extent to which community-based treatment programs receive the information contained in the corrections agency case plan and with the degree to which the programs find the information useful in arranging services for clients. |
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Service activation/provision |
This dimension is concerned with whether the client is engaged in community treatment, with the type and nature of services received, and with communication between agencies about the treatment. |