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Children and Family Futures 4940 Irvine Boulevard, Suite 202 Irvine, CA 92620

Research Findings from the Sacramento County Dependency Drug Court: Systems Changes and its Impact on Permanency Sharon M. Boles, Ph.D. Nancy K. Young, Ph.D. Children and Family Futures February 1, 2007 Anaheim, CA. Children and Family Futures 4940 Irvine Boulevard, Suite 202

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Children and Family Futures 4940 Irvine Boulevard, Suite 202 Irvine, CA 92620

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  1. Research Findings from the Sacramento County Dependency Drug Court: Systems Changes and its Impact on Permanency Sharon M. Boles, Ph.D. Nancy K. Young, Ph.D. Children and Family Futures February 1, 2007 Anaheim, CA Children and Family Futures 4940 Irvine Boulevard, Suite 202 Irvine, CA 92620 714.505.3525 Fax 714.505.3626 www.cffutures.com

  2. Sacramento County Statistics • Sacramento County population: 1.5 million • In 2004, there were approximately 7,000 substantiated child abuse/neglect referrals, in Sacramento.1 • Approximately 60% of child welfare cases in Sacramento involve families affected by substance use 1. Needell, B., Webster, D., Armijo, M., Lee, S., Cuccaro-Alamin, S., Shaw, T., Dawson, W., Piccus, W., Magruder, J., Exel, M., Conley, A., Smith, J., Dunn, A., Frerer, K., Putnam Hornstein, E., & Kaczorowski, M.R., (2006). Child Welfare Services Reports for California. Retrieved May 1, 2006, from University of California at Berkeley Center for Social Services Research website. URL: <http://cssr.berkeley.edu/CWSCMSreports/>

  3. Sacramento County’s Comprehensive Reform Five Components of Reform 1. Comprehensive cross-system joint training 2. Substance Abuse Treatment System of Care 3. Early Intervention Specialists 4. Recovery Management Specialists (STARS) 5. Dependency Drug Court Reforms have been implemented over the past eleven years

  4. Five Components of Sacramento County’s Comprehensive Reform 1. Comprehensive cross-system joint training • Three Levels of Training • AOD basics for all staff – 4 days required • AOD screening, brief intervention, motivational enhancement and AOD treatment – 4 days required of all case carrying workers • Group intervention skills – 4 days required of all ADS staff and voluntary for any CPS division staff

  5. Five Components of Sacramento County’s Comprehensive Reform 2. Substance abuse treatment system of care • Child welfare clients have priority access to treatment • Immediate access to substance abuse services • Group services expansion and implementation of pre-treatment groups

  6. Five Components of Sacramento County’s Comprehensive Reform 3. Early Intervention Specialists • Review of every court petition to determine if substance use disorders may be present • Immediate access to intervention and assessment at court hearings • Immediate authorization of publicly-funded treatment services

  7. Five Components of Sacramento County’s Comprehensive Reform 4. Recovery Management Specialists (STARS) • Motivational enhancement • Gender-specific services • Immediate access to recovery management and treatment services • Provider orientation of providing hope and accountability • Compliance monitoring—twice monthlies

  8. Five Components of Sacramento County’s Comprehensive Reform 5. Dependency Drug Court • Parallel system to dependency petition • Non-adversarial approach • 30, 60 and 90-day compliance hearings • Structured incentives for compliance and sanctions for non-compliance • Voluntary participation in on-going services

  9. Models of Family Drug Treatment Courts The Sacramento Initiative added a third primary model of family drug courts to the two previously described in the literature. The three models are: • Integrated (e.g., Santa Clara, Reno, Suffolk) • Both dependency matters and recovery management conducted in the same court with the same judicial officer • Dual Track (e.g., San Diego) • Dependency matters and recovery management conducted in same court with same judicial officer during initial phase • If parent is noncompliant with court orders, parent may be offered DDC participation and case may be transferred to a specialized judicial officer who increases monitoring of compliance and manages only the recovery aspects of the case • Parallel (e.g., Sacramento) • Dependency matters are heard on a regular family court docket • Specialized court services offered before noncompliance occurs • Compliance reviews and recovery management heard by a specialized court officer

  10. Level 3 Monthly Hearings Level 1 DDC Hearings 90 Days 30 Days 60 Days Jurisdiction & Disposition Hearings Child in Custody Detention Hearing Early Intervention Specialist (EIS) Assessment & Referral to STARS Court Ordered to STARS & 90 Days of DDC STARS Voluntary Participation STARS Court Ordered Participation Sacramento County Dependency Drug Court Model 180 Days Graduation Level 2 Weekly or Bi-Weekly Hearings

  11. Sacramento County Prior to Dependency Drug Court • 18.5% reunification rate • Parents unable to access AOD treatment • Social workers, attorneys, courts often uninformed on parent progress • Drug testing not uniform and results often delayed

  12. Multiple Data Sources

  13. Participant Groups

  14. Parents and Children in the Evaluation 24 Mos 24 Mos 24 Mos 24 Mos 12 Mos

  15. Child Demographic Characteristics • 2991 children: 173 comparison, 2818 DDC • Overall, 51.4% were girls and 48.6% were boys • 46.7% Caucasian • 27.9% African American • 20.4% Hispanic • 3.2% Asian/Pacific Islander • 1.8 % American Indian/Alaskan Native • There were no cohort differences in terms of gender • There were significantly more American Indian/Alaskan Native children in the comparison group (4.6%) than the DDC group (1.6%)

  16. Parent Demographic Characteristics • 1849 participants: 111 comparison, 1738 DDC • Overall, 70.0% of the participants were women, approximately 32 years of age • 52.0% Caucasian • 20.2% Hispanic • 20.0% African American • 3.0% American Indian/Alaskan Native • 3.0% Asian/Pacific Islander • 1.7% “other” • There were no cohort differences in terms of gender or race/ethnicity

  17. Parent Baseline Characteristics • 84.2% were unemployed, • 46.0% had less than a high school education • 22.0% were pregnant at treatment admission • 30.9% reported a disability impairment • 30.7% reported being diagnosed with chronic mental illness • 41.1% were homeless at treatment admission • 50.8% reported methamphetamine as their primary drug problem, 18.0% marijuana, 16.3% alcohol, 9.5% cocaine/crack, 2.5% heroin • There were no cohort differences in any of these variables • Gender differences were found with all of the baseline characteristics

  18. Baseline Characteristics with Significant Gender Differences **p<.01; ***p<.001

  19. Primary Drug Problem by Gender *p<.05; **p<.01, ***p<.001

  20. Treatment Admission Rates*** ***p<.001

  21. Gender Differences in Treatment Admission Rates*** ***p<.001

  22. Mean Number of Treatment Admissions*** ***p<.001

  23. Gender Differences in Mean Number of Treatment Admissions** **p<.01

  24. Treatment Modality*** ***p<.001; no gender differences were found in terms of treatment modality

  25. Average Days Per Treatment Episode* * p<.05

  26. Average Days Per Treatment Episode by Gender*** *** p<.001

  27. Treatment Discharge Status* * p<.05; no gender differences were found in terms of discharge status

  28. Treatment Discharge Status by Primary Drug Problem*** ***p<.001

  29. 12-Month Child Placement Outcomes **p<.01; ***p<.001

  30. Time to Reunification at 12 Months n.s.

  31. 24-Month Child Placement Outcomes **p<.01; ***p<.001

  32. Time to Reunification at 24 Months n.s.

  33. 24-Month Child Placement Outcomes by Parent Primary Drug Problem *p<.05 ***p<.001

  34. 24-Month Child Placement Outcomes by Race/Ethnicity of the Child **p<.01; ***p<.001

  35. Recidivism Rates

  36. 24-Month Cost Savings Due to Increased Reunification RatesPreliminary Findings • Takes into account the reunification rates, time of out-of-home care, time to reunification, and cost per month • 27.2% - Reunification rate for comparison group children • 43.6% - Reunification rate for court-ordered DDC group children • 221 Additional DDC children reunified • 33.1 – Average months in out-of-home care for comparison group children • 9.4 - Average months to reunification for court-ordered DDC children • 23.7 month differential • $10,049,036 Estimated Savings in Out-of-Home care costs

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