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Rewards and Sanctions in Veterans Treatment Court

Rewards and Sanctions in Veterans Treatment Court. some returning veterans suffer from invisible wounds. Of the more then two million troops who served in Iraq and Afghanistan more the half a million will return with invisible wounds. ptsd. service.

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Rewards and Sanctions in Veterans Treatment Court

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  1. Rewards and Sanctions in Veterans Treatment Court

  2. some returning veterans suffer from invisible wounds

  3. Of the more then two million troops who served in Iraq and Afghanistan more the half a million will return with invisible wounds ptsd service

  4. PTSD or post-traumatic stress disorder: An anxiety disorder that occurs after a traumatic event in which a threat of serious injury or death was experienced or witnessed and to which the individual responds with intense fear, helplessness, or horror.

  5. the disorder is marked by the following symptoms occurring for more than one month and causing significant distress and/or impairment: re-experiencing the event, avoiding stimuli relating to the event, numbing of general responsiveness, and hyper-arousal.

  6. percentage of vietnam veterans who suffered from ptsd who also suffered from a substance abuse issue

  7. Fifty percent of individuals arrested for drunk driving have at least one psychiatric comorbidity other than substance use disorder....post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is one of the most common psychiatric comorbidities among treatment samples of first-time and repeat DUI offenders

  8. There is a link between combat related PTSD and violent behavior

  9. Vietnam veterans suffering ptsd committed on average 4 times as many criminal assaults as those not suffering from ptsd

  10. PTSD has been correlated with five general types of criminal behavior, drunk driving, weapons charges, disorderly conduct, drug possession and assault

  11. alcohol related offenses dwi, felony dwi, death resulting, intoxication trespass drugs possession, sale criminal traffic assaultive crimes sexual, aggravated, kidnapping, simple, weapons thief felony misdemeanor 90‐day period, from September 1, 2008 through November 30, 2008, to identify Veterans who were booked into the Travis County jail

  12. 47.5% of vietnan Veterans suffering ptsd were subsequently arrested

  13. Judges imposed harsher sentences to the men and women who served their country then to those who did not. The United States Department of Justice, which studied incarcerated veterans, concluded that there was a sentencing disparity of about one additional year imprisonment

  14. How does this relate to incentives and sanctions in Veterans Treatment Court?

  15. The military has unique “belief’s, norms, values and language”

  16. Military training is designed to make the use of lethal force a mere muscle memorydone without thinking is a valued in the culture as it makes the job easierand more efficient it eliminates moral reasoning and judgment moral thinking is not conducive to battle field survival the primary distinction between civilian and military culture: violence becomes re-defined

  17. military culture prizes and wants there to be no psychological cost to the use of violence as this results in “degradation” of the fighting unit. This results in the individual soldier being taught that it is weak, embarrassing and shameful as well as a bad career move to admit to any symptoms or moralqualms.

  18. Your Defendants were all trained in a Military Culture

  19. Carrot and stick

  20. the carrot is 4 times more effective

  21. Incentive systems provide a rationale for drug-involved individuals to meet milestones and targets and comply with criminal justice conditions

  22. but you still need the stick

  23. a graduated sanction system, where penalties are progressively more onerous

  24. Effective sanctions must have four components: (a) clear identification of noncompliant behavior; (b) swift response; (c) certain, clear, transparent definitions; (d) proportionality to the behavior

  25. Requiring more treatment is not a sanction

  26. SUBSTANCE ABUSE vs. DEPENDENCEDo not assume that merely because an veteran has been arrested for an alcohol or drug-related offense, he or she must be an addict.

  27. SUBSTANCE ABUSE vs. DEPENDENCEDrug use particularly marijuana may simply be a from of coping with PTSD or brain injury.

  28. SUBSTANCE ABUSE vs. DEPENDENCEThe sanctions for those who are addicted should be different then for those who are using drugs to cope with their mental health problems

  29. ViolenceWhile a violent act is grounds for a high sanction it is not necessarily grounds for removal from the program

  30. Trust but Verify

  31. The most influential factor in veteran behavior modification is certainty. The more consistently veterans receive rewards for accomplishments and sanctions for infractions, the more effective the program

  32. rewards can be quite effective at low to moderate magnitudes. For example, positive outcomes have been achieved with low-magnitude rewards, such as verbal praise, diplomas, certificates of progress, transportation passes, and gift cards to local stores or restaurants.

  33. sanctions tend to be the least effective at the lowest and highest magnitudes, and most effective within the moderate range

  34. Stay Centered • Develop a wide range of intermediate rewards and sanctions that can be ratcheted upward or downward in response to participants’ behaviors. • Avoid using sanctions that are low or high in magnitude if possible.

  35. Thank you for you kind attention If you wish more information or to make a comment contact:Judge Brian W. MacKenzie@mackenzieb@oakgov.com

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