1 / 24

Trauma Services in Criminal Justice Settings: What, Why & How

Learn about providing trauma-informed services to women in the justice system, focusing on trauma, addictions, mental health, and recovery. Discover impactful programs like HUD Shelter Plus Care and the Tamar Program.

jella
Download Presentation

Trauma Services in Criminal Justice Settings: What, Why & How

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Trauma Services in Criminal Justice Settings: What, Why & How August 26, 2010 The Council of State Governments Justice Center Webinar

  2. Providing Trauma Informed Services to Women in the Justice System Joan Gillece, Ph.D. National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors National Technical Assistance Center joan.gillece@nasmhpd.org

  3. Phoenix Project • SAMHSA Jail Diversion Site 1997 • Served women with co-occurring disorders • Pre and Post-booking diversion • Mobile Crisis Unit • Multi-Agency Partnership • Located in Wicomico County

  4. Conclusions and Impacts • About 2/3 of women (68%) grew up in families in which one or both parents had active alcohol or substance abuse problems. • About 24% grew up in families where one or both parents had a serious mental illness. • Approximately 51% experienced childhood sexual abuse by a family member or someone outside the family prior to age 14.

  5. Conclusions and Impacts • About 43% experienced physical abuse by a family member prior to age 14. • By age 14, 59% reported using alcohol and 44% had begun using marijuana, • By age 17, 57% had become pregnant. • By age 18, 74% had experienced their first indications of serious mental illness & 34% had made at least 1 suicide attempt. • By age 18, 27% had been arrested at least 1 time

  6. HUD SHELTER PLUS CARE • Rental assistance for mental health consumers who are coming out of jail or under P & P • Begun in 1995. MHA awarded a five year grant of $5.5 million for 14 counties • Recidivism has consistently been 1% back to homelessness, 1% back to hospital, and less than 7% back to jail.

  7. TAMAR PROGRAM • SAMHSA Women and Violence Site • Only site addressing the needs of incarcerated women • Provides mental health, substance abuse, and trauma treatment in detention centers • Began in 3 local detention centers • Currently serving 10 sites

  8. Tamar’s Story • In the Old Testament, Tamar was a daughter of King David. Tamar’s half brother Amnon raped her. The author of II Samuel writes that afterwards she tore her clothes and went into her brother Absalom’s house. She is not mentioned again. The Tamar’s of today deserve better futures.

  9. TAMAR stands for: • Trauma • Addictions • Mental health • And • Recovery

  10. Preparing for Implementation • Trauma training for community agencies • Trauma training for Correctional Officers and staff • Correctional Cross-training for TAMAR clinical staff

  11. Sustaining TAMAR • Mental Hygiene Administration • AIDS Administration • Byrne Memorial Funding

  12. Tamar’s Children • Funded under SAMHSA “Build Mentally Healthy Communities” Grant • Designed to serve pregnant and post-partum incarcerated women and their infants • Provides holistic care

  13. Services in Facility • In last trimester, women move to off-site facility • Receive mental health, substance abuse, & trauma treatment, parenting supports, case management, and pre & post-natal care • Participate in the Circle of Security

  14. Circle of Security Intervention • Group Interventions • Careful & repeated review of videotapes of mother’s interaction with baby. • Assists in establishing a secure base & attachment • Increases mother’s awareness of events/behaviors

  15. Services in the Community • Intensive case management to transition into community • Entitlements • Housing-HUD’s Shelter Plus Care • Mental health, substance abuse, & trauma treatment • Peer support group • Continue with Circle of Security

  16. Funding Sources for Tamar’s Children • SAMHSA - Build Mentally Healthy Communities Grant • HUD - Shelter Plus Care Grant • Open Society Institute • Abell Foundation • GOCCP - RSAT Funds (DOJ) • State- In-Kind services • City- In-Kind services

  17. Tamar Community • Ryan White funds from the AIDS Administration to divert HIV positive, prostituted women. • Provide trauma treatment services through the TAMAR Program. • Targeting women in Baltimore City.

  18. National Center for Trauma Informed Care • CMHS’s National Center for Trauma-Informed Care (NCTIC) assists publicly-funded agencies, programs, and services in making the important cultural shift to a more trauma-informed environment that benefits both systems and consumers—an environment that is more supportive, comprehensively integrated, and empowering for trauma survivors.

  19. NCTIC Services • Training and technical assistance • Speakers Bureau • Education and Outreach • Resources and materials www. mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/nctic/about.asp

  20. JPORT: Justice Project Outreach Team START: Strengths to Achieve Recovery from Trauma CSTS: Community Support and Treatment Services (CMH) Washtenaw County, Michigan JPORT serves adults with psychiatric needs who are involved in the criminal justice system, In jail or out

  21. Challenges and Barriers • Shortened stays for women in the Washtenaw County Jail and Community Corrections • Women lost in transition from jail to JPORT and START in the community • Unmet needs of women in the START groups (Housing, income, co-occurring treatment, access to psychiatric treatment in the community, problems obtaining medications, access to health care…)

  22. Solutions • Short stays: Developed short term women’s trauma groups for the jail, community corrections, and probation Four session groups based on Beyond Trauma: A Healing Journey, by Dr. Stephanie Covington • Increase transitions: Use the same psychiatrist and trauma group facilitators in the jail and at JPORT/START to increase engagement • Meeting Unmet needs: • In Washtenaw County Jail: For some women, start full case management in the jail and transition to JPORT and START upon release • At JPORT in the community: Trauma and co-occurring groups, case management, and psychiatric treatment onsite. Nurses provide medical consultation, health screens, manage psychiatric clinic, help with medications, and assist in obtaining medical treatment for START clients Weekly drop-in times for women to apply for social security benefits through SOAR; assistance obtaining support from the Department of Human Services

  23. Contact Information Flo Hepola, LMSW, CAAC Co-occurring and Trauma Specialist JPORT/START hepolaf@ewashtenaw.org (734)222-3774

  24. Thank You! The recording of this webinar and PowerPoint slides will be posted to www.consensusproject.org early next week. This material was developed by presenters for this webinar.Presentations are not externally reviewed for form or content and as such, the statements within reflect the views of the authors and should not be considered the official position of the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Justice Center, the members of the Council of State Governments, or funding agencies supporting the work.

More Related