Login / Signup

Correlates of Treatment Readiness among Formerly Incarcerated Homeless Women.

Adeline M NyamathiBenissa E SalemMaria EkstrandKartik YadavYen LeTanya OleskowiczSanghyuk S Shin
Published in: Criminal justice and behavior (2018)
Treatment readiness is a key predictor of drug treatment completion, rearrest, and recidivism during community reentry; however, limited data exists among homeless, female ex-offenders (HFOs). The purpose of this study was to present baseline data from a randomized controlled trial of 130 HFOs who had been released from jail or prison. Over half (60.8%) of HFOs had a treatment readiness score of ≥ 40 (n = 79, μ = 40.2, SD = 8.72). Bivariate analyses revealed that methamphetamine use, psychological well-being, and high emotional support were positively associated with treatment readiness. On the other hand, depressive symptomology and depression/anxiety scores were negatively associated with the treatment readiness score. Multiple linear regression revealed that depressive symptomology was negatively associated with treatment readiness (β = -0.377; p = .001). Further analyses revealed that the effect of emotional support on treatment readiness was mediated by depressive symptomatology.
Keyphrases
  • pregnant women
  • type diabetes
  • depressive symptoms
  • insulin resistance
  • replacement therapy
  • adipose tissue
  • big data
  • stress induced
  • adverse drug
  • sleep quality