Psychology Publications and Other Works
Source Publication (e.g., journal title)
Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
January 2012
Abstract
Background
Substance use disorders and perpetration of intimate partner violence (IPV) are interrelated, major public health problems.
Methods
We surveyed directors of a sample of substance use disorder treatment programs (SUDPs; N=241) and batterer intervention programs (BIPs; N=235) in California (70% response rate) to examine the extent to which SUDPs address IPV, and BIPs address substance abuse.
Results
Generally, SUDPs were not addressing co-occurring IPV perpetration in a formal and comprehensive way. Few had a policy requiring assessment of potential clients, or monitoring of admitted clients, for violence perpetration; almost one-quarter did not admit potential clients who had perpetrated IPV, and only 20% had a component or track to address violence. About one-third suspended or terminated clients engaging in violence. The most common barriers to SUDPs providing IPV services were that violence prevention was not part of the program’s mission, staff lacked training in violence, and the lack of reimbursement mechanisms for such services. In contrast, BIPs tended to address substance abuse in a more formal and comprehensive way; e.g., one-half had a policy requiring potential clients to be assessed, two-thirds required monitoring of substance abuse among admitted clients, and almost one-half had a component or track to address substance abuse. SUDPs had clients with fewer resources (marriage, employment, income, housing), and more severe problems (both alcohol and drug use disorders, dual substance use and other mental health disorders, HIV + status). We found little evidence that services are centralized for individuals with both substance abuse and violence problems, even though most SUDP and BIP directors agreed that help for both problems should be obtained simultaneously in separate programs.
Conclusions
SUDPs may have difficulty addressing violence because they have a clientele with relatively few resources and more complex psychological and medical needs. However, policy change can modify barriers to treatment integration and service linkage, such as reimbursement restrictions and lack of staff training.
doi:10.1186/1747-597X-7-37
Originally published here: http://www.substanceabusepolicy.com/content/7/1/37
Recommended Citation
Timko, Christine; Valenstein, Helen; Lin, Patricia Y.; Moos, Rudolf H.; Stuart, Gregory Lyal; and Cronkite, Ruth C., "Addressing substance abuse and violence in substance use disorder treatment and batter intervention programs" (2012). Psychology Publications and Other Works.
https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_psycpubs/5