Bulletin entries analyse studies selected by Drug and Alcohol Findings as particularly relevant to improving outcomes from drug or alcohol interventions in the United Kingdom. Entries are drafted by Findings after consulting related research, study authors and other experts. Many were distilled from an extended review. If applicable this can be viewed via the Background notes link at the end of the entry. Entries are © Drug and Alcohol Findings. Permission is given to distribute these documents unamended or to incorporate passages in other documents as long as the source and copyright owner are acknowledged including the web address http://findings.org.uk. Links to source documents are in blue. Hover mouse over orange body text for explanatory notes.
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Patchy performance of UK offender treatment initiatives ...
Botched DTTO response to
crack using offenders ...
Treatment on bail makes little discernable difference ...
Testing on arrest scatter gun nets some extra treatment entrants ...
Testing children pointless but arrest referral offers early intervention
opportunities ...
‘Most promising' alcohol prevention programme tried with poor black US families
...
Self-financing resident-run houses maintain recovery after treatment ...
Concern over abstinence outcomes in Scotland's treatment services ...
In 2007 a clutch of government-commissioned reports shed light on the now superseded drug treatment and testing order and on new criminal justice initiatives under the Drug Interventions Programme (DIP) umbrella. Though phrased more diplomatically, verdicts ranged from pointless and botched through worthwhile but limited to distinctly promising, though the latter could only be said of the least drug-focused of the initiatives – arrest referral for under-18s.
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