Collaborative behavioral management: integration and intensification of parole and outpatient addiction treatment services in the Step'n Out study.
Document Type
Article, Non peer-reviewed
Publication Date
10-11-2010
Abstract
Integration of community parole and addiction treatment holds promise for optimizing the participation of drug-involved parolees in re-entry services, but intensification of services might yield greater rates of technical violations. Collaborative behavioral management (CBM) integrates the roles of parole officers and treatment counselors to provide role induction counseling, contract for pro-social behavior, and to deliver contingent reinforcement of behaviors consistent with contracted objectives. Attendance at both parole and addiction treatment are specifically reinforced. The Step'n Out study of the Criminal Justice-Drug Abuse Treatment Studies (CJ-DATS) randomly allocated 486 drug-involved parolees to either collaborative behavioral management or traditional parole with 3-month and 9-month follow-up. Bivariate and multivariate regression models found that, in the first 3 months, the CBM group had more parole sessions, face-to-face parole sessions, days on which parole and treatment occurred on the same day, treatment utilization and individual counseling, without an increase in parole violations. We conclude that CBM integrated parole and treatment as planned, and intensified parolees' utilization of these services, without increasing violations.
Recommended Citation
Friedmann, Peter D.; Rhodes, Anne G.; and Taxman, Faye S., "Collaborative behavioral management: integration and intensification of parole and outpatient addiction treatment services in the Step'n Out study." (2010). All Scholarly Works. 8412.
https://scholarlycommons.libraryinfo.bhs.org/all_works/8412
PMID
19960114