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Community Determinants of Substance Abuse Treatment Referrals from Juvenile Courts: Do Rural Youth Have Equal Access?

Overview
Specialties Pediatrics
Psychiatry
Date 2010 Oct 5
PMID 20890388
Citations 3
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Abstract

Many youth in juvenile justice are in need of substance use services, yet referral to services is often inadequate. This study examines the ecological factors related to substance use service referrals made through Tennessee's juvenile courts. A series of hierarchical binomial logistic models indicated that individual-level factors accounted for 31% of the variance among courts in referral rates. Community and court factors accounted for an additional 16% of the variance. Youth were more likely to be referred if they had a higher need, were White, were male, were adjudicated in communities that had a higher service density, and appeared in courts that had good relationship and frequent contact with mental health providers. Controlling for individual need, youth in rural areas tended to have lower referral rates; however, this relationship was mediated by the frequency of contact and the quality of relations between the court and mental health providers and county average SES.

Citing Articles

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Nelson V, Wood J, Belenko S, Pankow J, Piper K J Subst Use Addict Treat. 2024; 162:209358.

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Black girls and referrals: racial and gender disparities in self-reported referral to substance use disorder assessment among justice-involved children.

Johnson M, Lloyd S, Bristol S, Elliott A, Cottler L Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. 2022; 17(1):68.

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A preliminary examination of substance use risk among metropolitan and non-metropolitan girls involved in the juvenile justice system.

Staton M, Dickson M, Tillson M, Leukefeld C, Webster J, Knudsen H J Child Adolesc Subst Abuse. 2021; 29(1):46-57.

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