Criminal Justice

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Opioid use disorder (OUD) presents significant challenges within criminal justice settings, affecting individuals at various stages of the criminal justice system, including arrest, incarceration, and reentry into society. Many individuals involved in the criminal justice system have a history of opioid misuse, often stemming from factors such as untreated pain, trauma, and socioeconomic disadvantage. Inside correctional facilities, OUD prevalence is notably high, with limited access to evidence-based treatment and harm reduction services. This lack of access exacerbates the risk of opioid overdose, infectious disease transmission, and recidivism. Furthermore, individuals with OUD face numerous barriers upon reentry into society, including stigma, limited access to healthcare, housing, and employment opportunities, which can hinder their ability to achieve and maintain recovery. Addressing OUD within criminal justice settings requires comprehensive approaches that integrate prevention, treatment, and support services, as well as collaboration between healthcare providers, correctional staff, and community-based organizations to promote successful reintegration and reduce the cycle of incarceration and substance misuse.

Criminal Justice Resources

Websites

Opioid Addiction and the Criminal Justice System

The resources on this website are designed to assist correctional agencies, community-based treatment providers, probation and parole agencies, and other service providers in better responding to people who have opioid addictions who are in the criminal justice system.

Good Samaritan Drug Overdose Act of 2015

The Good Samaritan Drug Overdose Act of 2015 (Senate Bill 459, Chapter 26, Statutes of Nevada 2015 NRS 453C.120) created various provisions addressing the opiate overdose epidemic that continues to claim over 300 lives per year in Nevada. The law prevents punitive actions against health professionals and any person who administers naloxone or calls 911 to assist someone who may be overdosing on opiates. It also provides immunity to persons seeking medical treatment for an opioid overdose for themselves or someone else. Learn more about the Good Samaritan Law.

Tools & Resources

A toolkit designed to help you advocate for policies to improve addiction prevention, treatment, and recovery and remission in correctional settings.  
This guide examines the types of interventions that support successful reentry for adults with mental health conditions and/or substance use disorders who are leaving jail/prison.
A Tool for Local Government Officials, Jail Administrators, Correctional Officers, and Health Care Professionals is designed to support jails (including detention, holding, and lockup facilities) and communities in providing effective health care for adults (18 years of age and older) who are sentenced or awaiting sentencing to jail, awaiting court action on a current charge, or being held in custody for other reasons (e.g., violation of terms of probation or parole) and are at risk for or experiencing substance withdrawal.
This toolkit provides correctional administrators and health care providers recommendations and tools for implementing medication-assisted treatment (MAT) in correctional settings. It provides examples from the field that can be widely applied and adapted for programs that serve justice-involved individuals.
This guide provides information and practices that behavioral health providers can implement in their daily practice with patients or clients who are involved in the criminal justice system.
This guide focuses on using medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder in jails and prisons and during the reentry process when justice -involved persons return to the community. It provides an overview of policies and evidence-based practices that reduce the risk of overdose and relapse.

Posters & Infographics

More resources will be added soon, please check back.

Publications

This report is written for policymakers, administrators, and service providers committed to improving outcomes for the large number of adults with mental health and substance use disorders that cycle through the criminal justice system. It introduces an evidence-based framework for prioritizing scarce resources based on assessments of individuals’ risk of committing a future crime and their treatment and support needs. The report also outlines the principles and practices of the substance abuse, mental health, and corrections systems and proposes a structure for state and local agencies to build collaborative responses.
There are strategies that can assist community leaders, local and regional organizers, non-profit groups, law enforcement, public health, and members of the public in understanding and navigating effective ways to prevent opioid overdose in their communities. Use this information as a reference for evidence-based practices that have been successfully implemented in the U.S.
Research indicates that there is often a reluctance among those witnessing an overdose to summon emergency assistance from law enforcement or other first responders out of fear of arrest for drug possession or other charges. In an effort to reduce this fear and to encourage overdose witnesses to seek help, state policymakers developed Good Samaritan laws specific to drug overdoses. The purpose of these laws is to prioritize the overdose victim’s safety over arresting drug users by granting limited protection from criminal liability to persons seeking medical assistance and, in most cases, to the overdose victim. This document (1) provides a singular resource for each jurisdiction’s laws; (2) allows for a comparison of these laws between jurisdictions; and (3) identifies and highlights interesting provisions.
NIDA. 2021, April 13. How is opioid use disorder treated in the criminal justice system?. Retrieved from https://nida.nih.gov/publications/research-reports/medications-to-treat-opioid-addiction/how-opioid-use-disorder-treated-in-criminal-justice-system on 2024, June 6
Winkelman TNA, Silva RS. Opioid Use Disorder Treatment for People Involved in the US Criminal Justice System—Promising Advances and Critical Implementation Challenges. JAMA Netw Open. 2021;4(9):e2125120. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.25120
People interacting with the justice system — those arrested, awaiting trial in jail or prison, or on probation or parole — face stark challenges in the opioid crisis. Not only are they at significant risk of having opioid use disorder or overdosing, but they also are among the people least likely to receive medication and other health services to treat their addiction and support their recovery. To find better ways to connect justice-involved people with lifesaving treatment for opioid use disorder, the Helping to End Addiction Long-term® Initiative, or NIH HEAL Initiative®, funded a new national research network: the Justice Community Opioid Innovation Network (JCOIN). Read more.

Webinars & Online Learning

Current News & Research

Community-based Behavioral Health Services for Justice-involved Individuals

Traditional efforts in treatment for mental illness and substance use disorder for justice-involved individuals has been concentrated on providing tools and training for criminal justice professionals and was expensive and ineffective. Re-focusing on providing knowledge, skills, and training about justice-involved individuals to behavioral health providers helps them to provide community-based services to this population effectively and at reduced cost.

Re-envisioning How the Criminal Justice System Responds to the Opioid Crisis

Connecting justice-involved people with life saving medication treatment for opioid use disorder.

The Effectiveness of Interventions for Drug-Using Offenders in the Courts, Secure Establishments and the Community: A Systematic Review

Published in the International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, this systematic review evaluates the effectiveness of interventions, including MAT, drug courts, and therapeutic communities, for addressing substance use disorders among offenders.

The Risk-Need-Responsivity Model: Empirically Based Treatment for Criminal Offenders

The risk-need-responsivity (RNR) model was first drafted formally by researchers in Canada looking for ways to reduce recidivism for offenders in correctional settings (Andrews, et al., 1990). The authors described four principles of classification for effective rehabilitation which drive rehabilitation efforts: