Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders

The purpose of this research study is to understand the characteristics of the people arrested for felony charges and transferred into the Broward County Felony Mental Health Court (FMHC) program. This research project will review previously collected data on the subjects who participated in the FMH...

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Main Author: Tate, Maria Rosario
Format: Others
Published: NSUWorks 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cps_stuetd/71
https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1070&context=cps_stuetd
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spelling ndltd-nova.edu-oai-nsuworks.nova.edu-cps_stuetd-10702019-10-20T04:13:28Z Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders Tate, Maria Rosario The purpose of this research study is to understand the characteristics of the people arrested for felony charges and transferred into the Broward County Felony Mental Health Court (FMHC) program. This research project will review previously collected data on the subjects who participated in the FMHC program between January 2007 and September 2008, and who were diverted to a residential dual-diagnosis program. Problem-solving courts have been developed in many states as a way to effectively restore offenders and reduce recidivism (Stefan & Winick, 2005). The goal of mental health courts is to prevent criminal behavior and recidivism by accommodating necessary mental health services to those who need it. However, most offenders placed in a mental health program commit new violations or offenses. A frequent question that is raised when evaluating mental health courts is whether they are successful in allocating resources for mentally ill defendants, as well as whether jail diversion programs are effective in preventing recidivism or rehabilitating mentally ill offenders. The difficulty to find answers for those questions may be due to the diversity of each jurisdiction's population, complexity of mental illnesses and differences in each unique jail diversion program. Some reports state that in contrast to drug courts, current mental health courts seem to lack resources to assess the participation of services mandated (Steadman, Davidson & Brown, 2001.) In this current study, the data collected on the subjects is comprehensive and include criminal, family, trauma, abuse and psychiatric histories. The levels of compliance were taken from re-arrests records including new crimes and violations of probation for up to two years after entering the jail-diversion program. This study is seeking to investigate the relationship between recidivism and different diagnoses, types of trauma experienced as a child as well as trauma scales from the Trauma Symptom Inventory (TSI.) It is hypothesized that elevated scores on trauma scales as well as early exposure of abuse will be related to high recidivism among a subset of participants in the mental health court program. 2011-01-01T08:00:00Z campusdissertation application/pdf https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cps_stuetd/71 https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1070&context=cps_stuetd Theses and Dissertations NSUWorks Broward County Mental Health Court Court Diversion Program Mentally Ill Offenders Recidivism Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Broward County Mental Health Court
Court Diversion Program
Mentally Ill Offenders
Recidivism
Psychology
spellingShingle Broward County Mental Health Court
Court Diversion Program
Mentally Ill Offenders
Recidivism
Psychology
Tate, Maria Rosario
Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders
description The purpose of this research study is to understand the characteristics of the people arrested for felony charges and transferred into the Broward County Felony Mental Health Court (FMHC) program. This research project will review previously collected data on the subjects who participated in the FMHC program between January 2007 and September 2008, and who were diverted to a residential dual-diagnosis program. Problem-solving courts have been developed in many states as a way to effectively restore offenders and reduce recidivism (Stefan & Winick, 2005). The goal of mental health courts is to prevent criminal behavior and recidivism by accommodating necessary mental health services to those who need it. However, most offenders placed in a mental health program commit new violations or offenses. A frequent question that is raised when evaluating mental health courts is whether they are successful in allocating resources for mentally ill defendants, as well as whether jail diversion programs are effective in preventing recidivism or rehabilitating mentally ill offenders. The difficulty to find answers for those questions may be due to the diversity of each jurisdiction's population, complexity of mental illnesses and differences in each unique jail diversion program. Some reports state that in contrast to drug courts, current mental health courts seem to lack resources to assess the participation of services mandated (Steadman, Davidson & Brown, 2001.) In this current study, the data collected on the subjects is comprehensive and include criminal, family, trauma, abuse and psychiatric histories. The levels of compliance were taken from re-arrests records including new crimes and violations of probation for up to two years after entering the jail-diversion program. This study is seeking to investigate the relationship between recidivism and different diagnoses, types of trauma experienced as a child as well as trauma scales from the Trauma Symptom Inventory (TSI.) It is hypothesized that elevated scores on trauma scales as well as early exposure of abuse will be related to high recidivism among a subset of participants in the mental health court program.
author Tate, Maria Rosario
author_facet Tate, Maria Rosario
author_sort Tate, Maria Rosario
title Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders
title_short Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders
title_full Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders
title_fullStr Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders
title_full_unstemmed Recidivism and Participation in Court Diversion Programs by Mentally Ill Offenders
title_sort recidivism and participation in court diversion programs by mentally ill offenders
publisher NSUWorks
publishDate 2011
url https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cps_stuetd/71
https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1070&context=cps_stuetd
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