|
AATOD
has been working to increase access to methadone treatment though
the criminal justice system. We have identified critical access
points, which would encourage this initiative through jails, drug
courts and probation and parole offices.
AATOD
will be using Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Innovator Award funds
coupled with a Mallinckrodt grant to accomplish five basic objectives.
The
first objective will be to increase access to methadone treatment
in jails, building on the Rikers Island model in New York City and
the recent expansion to treatment access to methadone services in
other states, including Florida and Rhode Island. This project will
focus on jails as opposed to prisons, based with recent meetings
with correctional facility managers and other representatives in
the criminal justice system. It appears that inmates in jail have
a shorter sentencing with a significant percentage returning to
the community.
A
second objective of this initiative is to increase the flow of educational
information to drug court judges and administrators, jail representatives
and probation and parole officials. We build on the foundation of
the Drug Court Practitioner Fact
Sheet, which AATOD developed for the National Drug Court
Institute (NDCI) during 2002.
Another
objective will be to evaluate laws and policies in five targeted
states to develop guidelines and methods of overcoming any related
impediments to increasing access to methadone treatment through
the criminal justice system. The Legal Action Center (LAC), which
is a public interest law firm that specializes in this area, based
in New York and Washington, D.C., will work with AATOD in evaluating
such policies and practices.
A
final objective of the study will be to learn about the ideological
and funding impediments to increase access to methadone treatment
by conducting a national survey among three criminal justice organizations,
including the National Drug Court Institute, the American Probation
and Parole Association and the American Jail Association.

Update
- January 10, 2005
AATOD
has been working to increase access to methadone treatment through
the criminal justice system. We have identified critical access
points, which would encourage this initiative through jails, drug
courts and probation and parole offices. AATOD has been using a
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Innovators Award coupled with a Mallinckrodt
grant to accomplish a number of basic objectives.
The
first objective has been to increase access to methadone treatment
in jails, building on the Riker's Island model in New York City
and the recent expansion of treatment access to methadone treatment
in other states, including Florida, Rhode Island and Pennsylvania.
This
project already achieved a number of successes in 2005. The state
of Maryland decided to provide access to methadone maintenance treatment
for its opioid-addicted inmates in the Baltimore City Jail, effective
July 1, 2005.
The
state of New Mexico began a process of providing access to methadone
to its opioid-addicted inmates in its jail-based system as well
during November, 2005.
The
Orlando County Jail also initiated a buprenorphine treatment program
for opioid-addicted inmates, who were not enrolled in a methadone
treatment program at time of incarceration, expanding access to
the existing methadone treatment services, which are provided to
inmates, who are enrolled in a methadone treatment program at time
of incarceration.
A
second objective of this initiative is to increase the flow of educational
information to Drug Court judges and administrators, jail representatives,
and probation and parole officials. We will build on the foundation
of the Drug Court Practitioner Fact-Sheet, which AATOD developed
for the National Drug Court Institute (NDCI) during 2002. This Drug
Court Practitioner Fact-Sheet will be completely updated during
the first quarter of 2006 and will include an attitudinal survey,
which will be developed by NDRI, a nationally renowned, research-based
organization in New York City.
Another
objective will be to evaluate the laws and policies of five targeted
states, to develop guidelines and methods of overcoming any related
impediments to increasing access to methadone and buprenorphine
through the criminal justice system. The Legal Action Center (LAC),
which is a public interest law firm that specializes in the work
of our field, based in New York and Washington, DC, will work with
AATOD in evaluating such policies and practices.

|