A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee

Returning citizens face a host of barriers when attempting to reintegrate into society; thus, services for these concerns are imperative for successful reintegration. Unfortunately, services are often lacking, particularly in rural communities which tend to be overlooked in reentry research. In orde...

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Main Author: Gretak Leal, Alyssa P
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/3954
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5456&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-etd-54562021-08-05T05:03:52Z A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee Gretak Leal, Alyssa P Returning citizens face a host of barriers when attempting to reintegrate into society; thus, services for these concerns are imperative for successful reintegration. Unfortunately, services are often lacking, particularly in rural communities which tend to be overlooked in reentry research. In order to better determine service need for justice-involved populations in rural communities, the current study completed a gap analysis, both inspired and supplemented, by qualitative information collected from mental health providers (MHPs) in a rural Appalachian region of Tennessee. To complete the gap analysis, an estimation of need was collected via local crime statistics. Using this data, a two-sample t-test revealed that increased rurality was related to a significantly higher percentage of substance use related crimes, but not to crimes against persons or sexual crimes. Service availability data was then collected for local providers in the domains of general mental health, substance abuse, anger management (or anger management aligned), and sex offender treatment. It was found that nine of the ten counties in the identified region are considered mental health professional shortage areas (MHPSAs) for general mental health care. Using average caseload data from local MHPs, a calculation of provider shortfall was completed for specialty services for returning citizens. For the identified 10-county region, provider shortfalls were existent in all treatment domains. The largest gap identified was for anger management aligned services, while the smallest gap identified was for sex offender treatment services. An increase in rurality did not ensure an increased provider shortfall across domains. Overall, MPHs in the area identified similar needs in treatment services via two major qualitative themes and five subthemes. The findings from the current study provide a specific example of what services are missing for rural returning citizens. It is hoped that the results of this study help inform policy and programming efforts in rural communities as they attempt to close the service gap and successfully reintegrate rural returning citizens. 2021-08-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/3954 https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5456&context=etd Copyright by the authors. Electronic Theses and Dissertations eng Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University reintegration rural reintegration reentry services returning citizens mental health services mental health providers gap analysis Clinical Psychology Criminology and Criminal Justice Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic reintegration
rural reintegration
reentry services
returning citizens
mental health services
mental health providers
gap analysis
Clinical Psychology
Criminology and Criminal Justice
Psychology
spellingShingle reintegration
rural reintegration
reentry services
returning citizens
mental health services
mental health providers
gap analysis
Clinical Psychology
Criminology and Criminal Justice
Psychology
Gretak Leal, Alyssa P
A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee
description Returning citizens face a host of barriers when attempting to reintegrate into society; thus, services for these concerns are imperative for successful reintegration. Unfortunately, services are often lacking, particularly in rural communities which tend to be overlooked in reentry research. In order to better determine service need for justice-involved populations in rural communities, the current study completed a gap analysis, both inspired and supplemented, by qualitative information collected from mental health providers (MHPs) in a rural Appalachian region of Tennessee. To complete the gap analysis, an estimation of need was collected via local crime statistics. Using this data, a two-sample t-test revealed that increased rurality was related to a significantly higher percentage of substance use related crimes, but not to crimes against persons or sexual crimes. Service availability data was then collected for local providers in the domains of general mental health, substance abuse, anger management (or anger management aligned), and sex offender treatment. It was found that nine of the ten counties in the identified region are considered mental health professional shortage areas (MHPSAs) for general mental health care. Using average caseload data from local MHPs, a calculation of provider shortfall was completed for specialty services for returning citizens. For the identified 10-county region, provider shortfalls were existent in all treatment domains. The largest gap identified was for anger management aligned services, while the smallest gap identified was for sex offender treatment services. An increase in rurality did not ensure an increased provider shortfall across domains. Overall, MPHs in the area identified similar needs in treatment services via two major qualitative themes and five subthemes. The findings from the current study provide a specific example of what services are missing for rural returning citizens. It is hoped that the results of this study help inform policy and programming efforts in rural communities as they attempt to close the service gap and successfully reintegrate rural returning citizens.
author Gretak Leal, Alyssa P
author_facet Gretak Leal, Alyssa P
author_sort Gretak Leal, Alyssa P
title A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee
title_short A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee
title_full A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee
title_fullStr A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee
title_full_unstemmed A Gap Analysis of Reentry Services for Corrections-Involved Populations in Rural East Tennessee
title_sort gap analysis of reentry services for corrections-involved populations in rural east tennessee
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2021
url https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/3954
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5456&context=etd
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