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Criminal Justice and Behavior
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Article

The Effects of Prison Drug Treatment on Inmate Misconduct: A Repeated Measures Analysis

Wayne N. Welsh1*, Patrick McGrain2, Nicole Salamatin3, Gary Zajac4

1 Temple University
2 DeSales University
3 New Jersey Juvenile Justice Commission
4 Pennsylvania Department of Corrections

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: wwelsh{at}temple.edu.


   Abstract
A small body of research supports the "treatment hypothesis" that participation in prison treatment programs reduces inmate misconduct, although methodological weaknesses have limited generalizable conclusions. Using general linear modeling repeated measures techniques, this study examined pre- and posttreatment misconduct for 1,073 inmates who participated in therapeutic community (TC) drug treatment (n = 294) or a comparison group (n = 779) at five state prisons. Predictors included age, length of sentence, drug dependency, and prior and current criminal history. The hypothesis that TC treatment alone would significantly reduce misconduct over time was not supported. Instead, changes in misconduct over time interacted with individual characteristics and time served posttreatment. The article discusses implications of these results for treatment policies and future research.

First published on April 4, 2007, doi:10.1177/0093854806296897

Criminal Justice and Behavior 2007;34:600.

A more recent version of this article appeared on May 1, 2007


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