Sending substance-abusing state prisoners to
community-based treatment programs instead of prisons could reduce crime
and save billions of dollars, a new study concludes. The savings would
result from immediate reductions in the cost of incarceration, and by
subsequent reductions in the number of crimes committed by successfully
treated offenders, which leads to fewer re-arrests and
re-incarcerations, according to the researchers.
Almost half of all state prisoners abuse drugs or are drug-dependent,
but only 10 percent received medically based drug treatment while they
are incarcerated, according to Newswise.
Inmates who are untreated or not adequately treated are more likely to
start using drugs when they are released from prison, and commit crimes
at a higher rate than those who do not abuse drugs, the article notes.
The researchers built a simulation model of 1.14 million state
prisoners, representing the 2004 U.S. state prison population. The model
estimated the benefits of substance abuse treatment over individuals’
lifetimes, and calculated the crime and criminal justice costs related
to policing, trial and sentencing, and incarceration.
The model tracked individuals’ substance abuse, criminal activity,
employment and health care use until death or until they reached age 60,
whichever came first. They estimated the costs of sending 10 percent or
40 percent of drug-abusing inmates to community-based substance abuse
treatment instead of prison.
In the journal Crime & Delinquency,
the researchers found that if just 10 percent of eligible offenders
were treated in community-based programs instead of going to prison, the
criminal justice system would save $4.8 billion, compared with current
practices. If 40 percent of eligible offenders received treatment, the
savings would total $12.9 billion.
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