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A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing...

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A Life Course Approach to Preventing drugs and alcohol risks Andrew Brown (Mind) Michael O’Toole (Mentor UK)
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Page 1: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

A Life Course Approach to Preventing drugs and alcohol risksAndrew Brown (Mind)Michael O’Toole (Mentor UK)

Page 2: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Links between drugs, alcohol and crime

Photo by Flickr user Rob Best

Page 3: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Sexual offences and alcohol

Rape of a female; aged 16+

Sexual assault on a female; aged 13+

Rape of a female; aged 13-15

Sexual activity involving child; aged 13-15

Sexual assault on a female; under 13

Sexual activity involving a child; under 13

0 5 10 15 20 25

Proportion of sexual offences recorded by the police which were

‘alcohol related’

Source: Experimental Statistics 1: New data on police recorded violent and sexual offences, year ending March 2015

Using data from 26 police forces (accounting for 56% of police-recorded sexual offences in the year ending March 2015) it appears that that 10% of sexual offences in England and Wales were ‘alcohol-related’. 

Page 4: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Violent crime – perceived links to alcohol and drug intoxication

Yes No Don't know0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

50% 47%45%

9%

19%

46%

35%

Alcohol Drugs

In the year ending March 2015, victims believed the offender(s) to be under the influence of alcohol in just under half (47%) of all violent incidents, or an estimated 592,000 offences.

In nearly one-fifth (19%), or an estimated 241,000 violent incidents, the victim believed the offender(s) to be under the influence of drugs.

Source: Overview of violent crime and sexual offences

Page 5: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Offender perceptions of substance misuse and their offending behaviours

Believe offending is linked to drug use Believe offending is linked to alcohol use0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

50%

25%

42%46%

30%

Young offender Adult offender

Source: Needs and characteristics of young adults in custody, Ministry of Justice (2015)

Page 6: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Drug use and acquisitive crime

Almost half (47%) of people in drug treatment had committed acquisitive crime(s) in the 4 weeks before starting treatment.Source: Jones A, Hayhurst K, P, Millar T, Pierce M, Dunn G, Donmall M, Short-Term Outcomes for Opiate and Crack Users

Accessing Treatment: The Effects of Criminal Justice Referral and Crack Use. Eur Addict Res 2016;22:145-152

Yes47%No

53%

Page 7: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

What do we mean by prevention?

Photo by Flickr user sswj

Page 8: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Classifying Prevention – form and function

Universal Selective Indicated

Environmental

• Making behaviours illegal

• Tax policy

• Reducing alcohol retail density in high risk areas

• Laws restricting the ability of violent individuals from accessing firearms

Developmental

• Parenting programmes

• Classroom behaviour management

• Life-skills programmes

• Home visiting programmes for at-risk mothers

• Parenting programmes for high risk families

• Multi-systemic therapy for individuals with serious anti-social behaviour

Cognitive

Advertising campaigns

• Screening and brief interventions; normative feedback

• Substantive cognitive or motivational interventions with problem behaving individuals

Source: Professor David Foxcroft, EUSPR 2011

Page 9: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Life course approachA holistic, life-course, systemic approach to prevention:

Developing life skills that build resilience to risk.

Throughout a young person’s lifetime

CMO

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al re

port:

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alth

Page 10: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Life course approachA holistic, life-course, age appropriate approach to

prevention

building resilience, life skills and self-efficacy.

implementedin a varietyof settings

throughouta young person’s lifetime

Page 11: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Protective factors and systemic settings

Environment

Family

School

Community

Page 12: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

A system approach to prevention

COMMUNITY

YOUNG PERSON

FAMILY

SCHOOL

Carers

Parents

Teacher & staff training

Healthy Schools

Extracurricular activities

Leadership

Resilience education

Life-skills education

PSHE

Faith-based organisations

SchoolpolicyHealthcare

services(incl. mental

health)Emergency

services

External service

providers

Research and resource centres

Local Education Authorities

Media and advertising

Youth / community

groups

Child protection

servicesRehabilitation

services

Prisons

Charities

Government

National policy

Data collection Legal services

Carers’ support services

International policy

NGOs

Businesses

Work experience PRUs

Peers

Page 13: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Life Skills PreventionCritical thinkingDecision-makingCreative thinkingEffective communication

Relationship skillsSelf-awarenessEmpathyCoping with emotionsNormative beliefs

Page 14: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

What doesn’t work×Emphasising harms will disincentivise use×Young people given enough information

make rational decisions about their health×One off interventions are enough×School drug and alcohol

education/posters/TV adverts

Page 15: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Role of schools• School interventions reduce substance use and

improve academic outcomes• Strong attachment to schools is in itself a

preventative factor• Opportunity for learning with peers – normative

beliefs• Multi-sessions and regular follow-up to reinforce

learning

Page 16: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Evidence-based approaches

Page 17: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

What we do

Page 18: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Promising evidence-based prevention approaches

PreVenture

Page 19: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Don’t forget drug treatment

Used heroin last 4 weeks

Used crack last 4 weeks

Acquisitive offending last 4 weeks

Injected last 4 weeks

Offending to fund drug use last 4 weeks

Shared equipment last 4 weeks (% injectors)

Non-fatal overdose last 3 months

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

Follow up Baseline

Source: Jones A, Hayhurst K, P, Millar T, Pierce M, Dunn G, Donmall M, Short-Term Outcomes for Opiate and Crack Users Accessing Treatment: The Effects of Criminal Justice Referral and Crack Use. Eur Addict Res 2016;22:145-152

“Significant, and substantive, improvements in most behavioural measures were recorded, and were achieved within a relatively short period of time following enrolment in treatment. The study demonstrates that these successful outcomes continued to be the norm for the English opiate- and/or crack-user treatment population, despite a doubling in the number of drug users treated, and changes in referral patterns and drug use profiles.”

Page 20: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Don’t forget alcohol treatment

Genera

lDriv

er

Violent

Acquisit

ive Total

05,000

10,00015,00020,00025,00030,00035,00040,000

Pre-treatment Post-treatment

“We observed a reduction in offending during a two-year follow-up after treatment for AUD (crude pre-treatment and post-treatment offending rate per 1000 falling from 221.5 to 169.4). Less offending was independently associated with completion of treatment (and long retention) and inpatient withdrawal management and/or pharmacological therapy.”

Source: Is treatment for alcohol use disorder associated with reductions in criminal offending? A national data linkage cohort study in England

Page 21: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]
Page 22: A life course approach to preventing drugs & alcohol risks [March 2016 Int'l Crime & Policing Conference]

Resources• UNODC – International Standards on Drug Prevention http://

www.unodc.org/unodc/en/prevention/prevention-standards.html • EMCDDA – European Drug Prevention Quality Standards http://

www.emcdda.europa.eu/publications/manuals/prevention-standards • ACMD – Prevention of Drug and Alcohol Dependence https://

www.gov.uk/government/publications/prevention-of-drug-and-alcohol-dependence

• Washington State Institute of Public Policy – Cost Benefit Results http://www.wsipp.wa.gov/BenefitCost

• Public Health England – Why Invest Slides http://www.nta.nhs.uk/Why-Invest-2014-FINAL.aspx


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