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New Mexico House Passes Drug Treatment Measure

The New Mexico legislature has resurrected a previously-failed measure aimed at offering something other than jail time to people facing drug possession charges.

Susan Montoya Bryan of the Associated Press provided the following details in her Feb. 17 article:
The proposed Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act would give judges the ability to determine after a hearing if a treatment program would be a viable option for an interested defendant. The defendant would have to pay for the treatment, and the state could pursue the charges if the treatment wasn't completed.

Supporters of the measure, which passed on a 34-31 vote, said the option of treatment could help break the cycle of drug addiction and save the state millions of dollars in incarceration costs.

"We here in New Mexico have found that incarceration isn't the only answer, but it's certainly the most expensive one," said House Majority Leader W. Ken Martinez, D-Grants. "If we just incarcerate people at that rate, at that huge expense, we end up having to figure out a way to pay for it."

Labels: jail, treatment

Posted By: Aspen/CRC 0 Comments

Drug Abuse More Common Among Youth Whose Fathers Have Been in Jail

Teenagers whose biological fathers have been in jail are more likely to engage in teen substance abuse, using marijuana and other illegal drugs, according to a new study from Bowling Green University.

  • Researchers went through information from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, which has been tracking thousands of teenagers from 1995 to the present.
  • Over 50% of boys and 40% of girls whose fathers had been incarcerated had experimented with marijuana. This compares to 38% and 28%, respectively, of marijuana use among their peers, whose fathers had never been in jail.
  • The first group also had an elevated risk for using other drugs, such as cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine.

"Long-term drug use may exasperate many other problems faced by disadvantaged youth, including mental health issues, delinquency, dropping out of school, domestic violence and poverty," said lead author Michael Roettger. "This is of particular concern within poor and minority communities where incarcerations are disproportionately located."

The study appears in the journal Addiction.
 

Labels: teen_drug_use, parental_involvement, jail, fathers

Posted By: CRC Health Group 1 Comment