TY - JOUR
T1 - One Step at a Time
T2 - A Latent Transitional Analysis on Changes in Substance Use, Exposure to Violence, and HIV/AIDS Risk Behaviors among Female Offenders
AU - Jones, Abenaa Acheampong
AU - Gerke, Travis
AU - Striley, Catherine W.
AU - Whitehead, Nicole
AU - Osborne, Vicki
AU - Cottler, Linda B.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by the Florida Education Fund (Jones), R01NR09180 (PI: Cottler), and partially funded by T32DA007292 (Jones AA, PI: Johnson, RM.). The authors want to acknowledge Dr. Catina O’Leary and Dr. Robert Crecilius for their essential role in the Sisters Teaching Options for Prevention (STOP) study. The authors also acknowledge all the staff and participants in STOP, the UF Department of Epidemiology, College of Medicine, College of Public Health and Health Profession. This paper is a part of an unpublished doctoral dissertation authored by Acheampong Jones.
Funding Information:
Acknowledgements This study was funded by the Florida Education Fund (Jones), R01NR09180 (PI: Cottler), and partially funded by T32DA007292 (Jones AA, PI: Johnson, RM.). The authors want to acknowledge Dr. Catina O’Leary and Dr. Robert Crecilius for their essential role in the Sisters Teaching Options for Prevention (STOP) study. The authors also acknowledge all the staff and participants in STOP, the UF Department of Epidemiology, College of Medicine, College of Public Health and Health Profession. This paper is a part of an unpublished doctoral dissertation authored by Acheampong Jones.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, Southern Criminal Justice Association.
PY - 2018/9/1
Y1 - 2018/9/1
N2 - The aim of this analysis is to identify latent subgroups of women based on substance use, exposure to violence, and risky sexual behaviors and quantify discrete stages of behavior change over time. Data comes from 317 women recruited from a Municipal Drug Court System in the Midwest. All participants were interviewed regarding their substance use and sexual behaviors, as well as their exposure to violence at baseline, a 4th-month follow-up, and an 8th-month follow-up. A latent transitional analysis (LTA), a longitudinal extension of a latent class analysis (LCA), was used to quantify discrete stages of behavior change. The results of our analyses revealed 4 distinct behavioral profiles in our sample: 1) women with high probabilities of risky sexual behaviors, exposure to violence, and crack/cocaine use, 2) women with a high probability of exposure to violence, and moderate sexual risk taking, 3) women characterized solely by a high probability of crack/cocaine use, 4) women with low probabilities of all factors. The proportion of women in latent statuses characterized by a high probability of crack/cocaine use did not substantially decrease over time. Women who experienced child sexual abuse, had a greater number of lifetime arrests, were older, and believed they had risky drug using behavior that needed changing at baseline were significantly more likely to be in higher-risk latent statuses. Targeted interventions tailored to crack/cocaine users, as well as a wide-spread need for trauma-informed interventions among females involved in the criminal justice system, are needed.
AB - The aim of this analysis is to identify latent subgroups of women based on substance use, exposure to violence, and risky sexual behaviors and quantify discrete stages of behavior change over time. Data comes from 317 women recruited from a Municipal Drug Court System in the Midwest. All participants were interviewed regarding their substance use and sexual behaviors, as well as their exposure to violence at baseline, a 4th-month follow-up, and an 8th-month follow-up. A latent transitional analysis (LTA), a longitudinal extension of a latent class analysis (LCA), was used to quantify discrete stages of behavior change. The results of our analyses revealed 4 distinct behavioral profiles in our sample: 1) women with high probabilities of risky sexual behaviors, exposure to violence, and crack/cocaine use, 2) women with a high probability of exposure to violence, and moderate sexual risk taking, 3) women characterized solely by a high probability of crack/cocaine use, 4) women with low probabilities of all factors. The proportion of women in latent statuses characterized by a high probability of crack/cocaine use did not substantially decrease over time. Women who experienced child sexual abuse, had a greater number of lifetime arrests, were older, and believed they had risky drug using behavior that needed changing at baseline were significantly more likely to be in higher-risk latent statuses. Targeted interventions tailored to crack/cocaine users, as well as a wide-spread need for trauma-informed interventions among females involved in the criminal justice system, are needed.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85033496503&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85033496503&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s12103-017-9419-1
DO - 10.1007/s12103-017-9419-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85033496503
SN - 1066-2316
VL - 43
SP - 471
EP - 485
JO - American Journal of Criminal Justice
JF - American Journal of Criminal Justice
IS - 3
ER -