SMART Policy Briefs
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-2022
Abstract
People with mental health and substance use disorders who would benefit from treatment are overrepresented in the criminal justice system. It has been reported that 63% of individuals in jail and 58% of individuals in prison meet the criteria for having a substance use disorder, and 36% of the population serving a state prison sentence were being treated for a mental health disorder, which is 17% higher than the general population in Tennessee. Justice-involved individuals with mental health and substance use disorders have a higher risk of recidivism, especially when they lack access to medications and behavioral health treatments both during and after incarceration. However, despite this heightened prevalence and treatment need, criminal justice entities rarely have the resources needed to ensure at-risk individuals receive continuous evidence-based care. Given Tennessee’s incarceration rate has risen to 10% above the national average, and almost half of all incarcerated individuals are rearrested within three years of release, it is critical for individuals to have access to continuous care both during incarceration and at reentry into the community.
Recommended Citation
Trautwein, Jason R.; Moore, Kelly PhD; Dierenfeldt, Ricki PhD; Hart, Jim; Slone, Duane; Kourvelas, Jeremy; and Tourville, Jennifer G. DNP, "The Need for Continuity of Care in the Criminal Justice System" (2022). SMART Policy Briefs.
https://trace.tennessee.edu/spn_briefs/7
Comments
See attached report. For additional information, please visit https://smart.tennessee.edu/