For kids with behavioural issues, focusing on diversion yields positive results: Study

kids with behavioural issues

Researchers found that focusing on diversion — instead of detention — yields positive results for youth with behavioral health issues.

kids with behavioural issues

Of the 5,300 children enrolled in the Ohio Behavioral Health Juvenile Justice Initiative since 2006, 21 percent reported that someone close to them had been murdered in the past year. Nearly half of the boys and more than a quarter of the girls in the program have both substance abuse and mental health disorder.

But there’s good news, too: From 2017 through 2019, 81% of the participants — aged 10 through 17 — successfully completed the state’s juvenile diversion program, and data indicated that 79% of youth reduced their contact with police while in treatment.

Those findings are from a new detailed evaluation of the Ohio Behavioral Health Juvenile Justice Initiative (BHJJ) by researchers at the Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences at Case Western Reserve University.

The key conclusion: Many youthful offenders can benefit from community-based diversion programs designed to address mental health and substance use issues in lieu of commitment to local or state-run detention centres.

“The majority of justice-involved youth have a history of mental health and/or substance use issues, and have experienced a great deal of trauma,” said Jeff Kretschmar, co-author of the study and the research associate professor at the university’s Begun Center for Violence Prevention Research and Education.

“However, local jurisdictions are often ill-equipped to accurately assess youth for behavioral health problems and provide appropriate treatment. Ohio’s Behavioral Health Juvenile Justice Initiative was intended to transform and expand the local systems’ options to better serve these youths.”

See also  How can parents enjoy their child’s adolescence?

The report focused on youth currently enrolled in the program rather than retrospectively, Kretschmar said, to “identify emerging behavioral health trends and better understand the effectiveness of the model as it operates across Ohio today.” Report highlights include: –

Youth reported a significant decrease in trauma symptoms and problem severity from intake to termination, and a significant improvement in functioning. -Since 2015, only 3.8% of youth enrolled in BHJJ were committed to a state-run detention facility after enrollment.

-BHJJ costs about $5,200 per child, compared with $196,000 per child who enters a state-run detention facility.

“The breadth of the data provides us with an opportunity to examine outcomes for youth in BHJJ from a variety of angles and provides practitioners with enough information to match programming with behavioral health needs,” said Fredrick Butcher, research assistant professor at the Begun Center.

Source: ANI

You may like:

Self-controlled children tend to be healthier middle-aged adults, suggests study

The findings of a study suggest that self-control, the ability to contain one’s own thoughts, feelings and behaviors, and to work toward goals with a plan, is one of the personality traits that makes a child ready for school. And, it turns out, ready for life as well. Read More:

Loading

You May Like
Kareena Kapoor, Saif Ali Khan with son Taimur welcome a new member in family ‘baby boy’
Kareena Kapoor, Saif Ali Khan with son

Taimur's finally got a baby brother! Kareena Kapoor & Saif Ali Khan have now became proud parents to a baby boy. The actress delivered her second baby on February 21 ... READ MORE

Study reveals, covering faces around kids would not help mask emotions
Happy Smiling Kid

Washington [US], December 25 (ANI): According to a new study, the proliferation of face coverings in order to keep a check on Covid-19, isn't keeping children from understanding facial expressions. ... READ MORE

See also  An open letter by a working mom
8 Foods You Shouldn’t Feed Your Children so that they Remain Healthy
8 Foods You Shouldn’t Feed Your Children so that they Remain Healthy

According to studies, it is found that young children suffer from various diseases, one of the prominent being infant botulism, caused by a special type of bacteria that occurs in ... READ MORE

15 Effective Ways to Stop Kids From Lying
Stop Kids From Lying

When kids start growing up, there are many habits and behavior they develop. Some of them may be good habits, but they can develop bad habits, such as lying. Kids ... READ MORE

Leave a Reply