Department of Psychology, East Tennessee State University, 420 Rogers-Stout Hall PO Box 70649, Johnson City, TN 37614.
Department of Psychiatry, Division of Law and Psychiatry, Division of Substance Abuse, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2019 Feb 12;80(2):18m12317. doi: 10.4088/JCP.18m12317.
Current knowledge regarding the intersection of psychiatric disorders and crime in the United States is limited to psychiatric, forensic, and youth samples. This study presents nationally representative data on the relationship of DSM-5 psychiatric disorders, comorbid substance and mental health disorders, and multimorbidity (number of disorders) with criminal behavior and justice involvement among non-institutionalized US adults.
Data were drawn from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions Wave III (NESARC-III; 2012-2013; N = 36,309). Logistic regressions were used to examine the association of specific disorders (eg, mood, anxiety, eating, posttraumatic stress, substance use), comorbid substance use and mental health disorders, and multimorbidity with lifetime criminal behavior, incarceration experience, and past-12-month general, alcohol-related, and drug-related legal problems.
Overall, 28.5% of participants reported a history of criminal behavior, 11.4% reported a history of incarceration, 1.8% reported current general legal problems, 0.8% reported current alcohol-related legal problems, and 2.7% reported current drug-related legal problems. The presence of any disorder was associated with a 4 to 5 times increased risk of crime outcomes. Drug use disorders were associated with the highest risk of lifetime crime (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 6.8; 95% CI, 6.1-7.6) and incarceration (AOR = 4.7; 95% CI, 4.1-5.3) and current legal problems (AOR = 3.3; 95% CI, 2.6-4.2). Multimorbidity and comorbid substance use and mental health disorders were associated with additional risk. Controlling for antisocial personality disorder did not change the findings.
Community adults with substance use disorders, comorbid substance use and mental health disorders, and increasing multimorbidity are most at risk of crime and justice involvement, highlighting the importance of community-based addiction treatment.
目前,美国关于精神障碍与犯罪交叉问题的知识仅限于精神病学、法医学和青年群体。本研究提供了全国代表性数据,说明了 DSM-5 精神障碍、合并物质和心理健康障碍以及多种疾病(疾病数量)与美国非住院成年人犯罪行为和司法涉入的关系。
数据来自全国酒精相关状况调查 III 期(NESARC-III;2012-2013 年;N=36309)。使用逻辑回归检验特定障碍(例如,情绪、焦虑、饮食、创伤后应激、物质使用)、合并物质使用和心理健康障碍以及多种疾病与终身犯罪行为、监禁经历以及过去 12 个月一般、酒精相关和药物相关法律问题的关联。
总体而言,28.5%的参与者报告有犯罪行为史,11.4%报告有监禁史,1.8%报告有当前一般法律问题,0.8%报告有当前酒精相关法律问题,2.7%报告有当前药物相关法律问题。存在任何障碍与犯罪结果的风险增加 4 至 5 倍相关。物质使用障碍与终生犯罪(调整后的优势比 [OR] = 6.8;95%置信区间,6.1-7.6)和监禁(OR = 4.7;95%置信区间,4.1-5.3)以及当前法律问题(OR = 3.3;95%置信区间,2.6-4.2)的风险最高相关。多种疾病和合并物质使用和心理健康障碍与额外风险相关。控制反社会人格障碍不会改变这些发现。
患有物质使用障碍、合并物质使用和心理健康障碍以及多种疾病的社区成年人面临最大的犯罪和司法涉入风险,这突出了基于社区的成瘾治疗的重要性。