Bellair Paul E, Vuolo Mike, LaPlant Eric G
a Department of Sociology , The Ohio State University , Columbus , Ohio , USA.
Subst Use Misuse. 2018 Apr 16;53(5):828-836. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2017.1388260. Epub 2017 Nov 27.
Employment is a central component of economic independence and is widely viewed as an essential element of social control. Whether frequent drug use reduces the likelihood of employment or obstructs hours worked, wages, and job commitment is therefore an important question about which there remains uncertainty.
We improve on shortcomings of prior research through a monthly within-person analysis of a population at high-risk of both drug use and poor employment outcomes. We present multilevel models of the 18 months spent on the street preceding the arrest that led to incarceration in minimum/medium security facilities in Ohio from a random sample of 250 adult male inmates interviewed during the outset of a prison spell.
The analysis reveals consistently strong, negative effects of frequent drug use on employment, hours worked, and wages in the month following frequent drug use, including marijuana, cocaine, heroin, and prescription opioids. As well, frequent drug use (with the exception of marijuana) undermines job commitment during the months that participants are employed.
The consequences of frequent drug use for future employment are consistently negative within this criminal justice sample. Results suggest that lower levels of drug use may improve the success of postrelease employment programs. In a context of increasing concern over rising opioid and heroin, but also cocaine and marijuana abuse, the findings suggest a renewed focus on and perhaps expansion of evidence-based drug treatment among populations embedded within the criminal justice system, particularly if employment constrains criminal behavior.
就业是经济独立的核心要素,被广泛视为社会控制的关键因素。因此,频繁吸毒是否会降低就业可能性或影响工作时长、工资及工作投入,是一个重要但仍存在不确定性的问题。
我们通过对吸毒和就业结果不佳风险均较高的人群进行每月一次的个体内分析,改进了先前研究的不足。我们展示了对250名成年男性囚犯进行随机抽样的多层次模型,这些囚犯在俄亥俄州因被捕而被关押在最低/中等安全级别的监狱设施中,分析时间为入狱前在街头度过的18个月。
分析显示,频繁吸毒(包括大麻、可卡因、海洛因和处方阿片类药物)对吸毒后一个月的就业、工作时长和工资始终产生强烈的负面影响。此外,频繁吸毒(大麻除外)会在参与者就业的几个月里削弱其工作投入。
在这个刑事司法样本中,频繁吸毒对未来就业的影响始终是负面的。结果表明,减少吸毒量可能会提高出狱后就业项目的成功率。在对阿片类药物、海洛因以及可卡因和大麻滥用日益担忧的背景下,研究结果表明应重新关注并可能扩大刑事司法系统内人群基于证据的药物治疗,特别是如果就业能抑制犯罪行为的话。