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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| OAR, Fairfax | UNKNOWN |
| Slonky, Inc | UNKNOWN |
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A key component of effective offender treatment is an initial assessment of risk factors followed by feedback to facilitate problem awareness and engagement in appropriate treatment and/or behavior change. Feedback regarding areas of high risk, however, can be experienced as threatening.
The investigators propose to develop, fine-tune, and pilot-test a computerized system for risk assessment and feedback, including evaluation of a brief pre-feedback prosocial values affirmation exercise (Cohen & Sherman, 2014) aimed at decreasing defensiveness and increasing inmates' willingness to access and process risk-relevant information and to utilize post-release treatment resources, thereby reducing post-release substance misuse, HIV risk behavior, and criminal recidivism. Participants will be 170 jail inmates nearing release into the community - 20 pilot participants and 150 study participants randomly assigned to one of three conditions: (1) Values Affirmation + Personalized Risk Feedback; (2) Personalized Risk Feedback only; (3) Control. The baseline and risk assessment, values affirmation manipulation, and personalized risk feedback will be presented via touch-screen computers, requiring minimal training to administer. Analyses will assess:
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Values Affirmation plus Risk Feedback | Experimental | Values Affirmation with Risk Feedback in substance use and HIV domains of risk |
|
| Risk Feedback | Active Comparator | Sham Values Affirmation with Risk Feedback in substance use and HIV domains of risk |
|
| Sleep Control | No Intervention | Description of sleep habits in lieu of values affirmation/sham values affirmation. No risk feedback |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Values Affirmation | Behavioral | Experimental Group selects two values and describes why they are important |
|
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Changes in substance use | Changes in substance use -- among those who were identified at risk and who thus received feedback, pre-post incarceration changes in terms of pre-incarceration standard deviations. If more than one domain of feedback, average standard deviation change. | 3 months post-release (Time 2) |
| Changes in HIV risk behavior | Changes in HIV risk behavior -- among those who were identified at risk and who thus received feedback, pre-post incarceration changes in terms of pre-incarceration standard deviations. If more than one domain of feedback (risky sex, risky needle use), average standard deviation change. | 3 months post-release (Time 2) |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Changes in accuracy of perceptions of normative risk behavior | Changes in accuracy of perceptions of normative behavior (pre-post intervention changes in terms of pre-intervention standard deviations) in areas of risk/feedback | Immediately following intervention (Time 1) |
| Requests Community Resources |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| June P Tangney, PhD | Contact | 7039931365 | jtangney@gmu.edu | |
| Jeffrey Stuewig, PhD | Contact | 7039931365 | jstuewig@gmu.edu |
| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| June P Tangney, PhD | George Mason University | Principal Investigator |
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We will make the data and associated documentation available to researchers under a data-sharing agreement that provides for: (1) release of individually prepared datasets containing the subset of variables required to answer the requester's research question(s); (2) a commitment to using the data only for research purposes and not to attempt to identify any individual participant; (3) a commitment to securing the data using appropriate computer technology housed in a secure laboratory facility; and (4) a commitment to destroying or returning the data after analyses are completed. Because of the exceptionally sensitive nature of the data, detailed criminal history and re-arrest information and self-reports of undetected criminal behavior will not be shared. Data requests will be accepted beginning 12 months after publication of the primary findings of the proposed project.
Beginning 12 months after publication of the primary findings of the proposed project, for 5 years.
Researchers who commit to using the data only for research purposes and not to attempt to identify any individual participant; who commit to securing the data using appropriate computer technology housed in a secure laboratory facility; and who commit to destroying or returning the data after analyses are completed.
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D019966 | Substance-Related Disorders |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D064419 | Chemically-Induced Disorders |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
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| Risk Feedback | Behavioral | Experimental and comparator conditions both receive normative feedback in domains of risk |
|
Choose to print a copy of community resources in domain(s) of risk |
| Immediately following intervention (Time 1) |
| Makes Use of Community Resources | Makes use of relevant community services during 3 months post-release | 3 months post-release (Time 2) |