Boles Sharon M, Young Nancy K, Moore Toni, DiPirro-Beard Sharon
Children and Family Futures, USA.
Child Maltreat. 2007 May;12(2):161-71. doi: 10.1177/1077559507300643.
Dependency Drug Courts (DDCs) are a growing method of addressing the functional status and reunification success of families involved in child welfare and affected by substance use disorders. Despite widespread interest in DDCs, few evaluations have appeared in the literature to help inform the discussion about their effectiveness. This article provides a description of various types of DDCs and reports 24-month reunification rates from the Sacramento DDC. Results indicated that DDC participants had higher rates of treatment participation than did comparison participants. In addition, at 24 months, 42% of the DDC children had reunified versus 27.2% of the comparison children. There were no differences in treatment completion or child reunification rates by parent's primary drug problem. Rates of recidivism were extremely low for both the DDC and comparison groups and did not differ significantly. The results of the present study are encouraging and suggest that rigorous, controlled studies are merited to further evaluate the effectiveness of DDCs.
成瘾药物法庭(DDCs)是一种日益普遍的方法,用于处理涉及儿童福利且受物质使用障碍影响的家庭的功能状况和家庭团聚成功率。尽管人们对成瘾药物法庭普遍感兴趣,但文献中很少有评估报告来为关于其有效性的讨论提供参考。本文描述了不同类型的成瘾药物法庭,并报告了萨克拉门托成瘾药物法庭的24个月家庭团聚率。结果表明,与对照组参与者相比,成瘾药物法庭参与者的治疗参与率更高。此外,在24个月时,成瘾药物法庭中的儿童有42%实现了家庭团聚,而对照组儿童的这一比例为27.2%。父母的主要药物问题在治疗完成率或儿童家庭团聚率方面没有差异。成瘾药物法庭组和对照组的累犯率都极低,且没有显著差异。本研究结果令人鼓舞,并表明值得进行严格的对照研究,以进一步评估成瘾药物法庭的有效性。