African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors

African American women, in particular those who are economically marginalized, are disproportionately subject to surveillance by social service and criminal justice agencies (James et al., 2003) and are vulnerable to race- and gender-biased policy implementation (Chibnall et al., 2003; Zerai, 2002)....

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Main Author: Newton, Kathryn
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2008
Subjects:
SES
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cps_diss/23
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1022&context=cps_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-cps_diss-10222013-04-23T03:18:55Z African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors Newton, Kathryn African American women, in particular those who are economically marginalized, are disproportionately subject to surveillance by social service and criminal justice agencies (James et al., 2003) and are vulnerable to race- and gender-biased policy implementation (Chibnall et al., 2003; Zerai, 2002). They also experience population-specific personal (Ehrmin, 2001, 2002), social (Riehman, Iguchi, Zeller, & Morral, 2003; MacMaster, 2005), and economic barriers (Tighe & Saxe, 2006) to accessing and entering substance abuse treatment services. These factors contribute to lower rates of treatment entry follow-through (Siqueland et al., 2002) and higher drop-out rates (Scott-Lennox, Rose, Bohlig, & Lennox, 2000) than women from other racial and ethnic groups. This qualitative study explored African American women’s perceptions of mandated referral to substance abuse treatment and the impact of those perceptions on their treatment entry. The sample included 17 women age 18 years and over who were currently enrolled at three gender-specific treatment programs (one intensive outpatient and two residential) in a major southeastern urban area. This naturalistic inquiry (Lincoln and Guba, 1987) was informed by Black feminist epistemology (Collins, 2000) in accordance with recommendations for culturally sensitive research with women of color (Landrine, Klonoff, & Brown-Collins, 1995). Participants completed one-time, in-depth (one to two hour) interviews in which they were invited to explore their experiences with mandated substance abuse treatment referrals from state agencies (child protective services and the criminal justice system). Results indicate that participants generally perceived the treatment mandate as helpful. However, they also indicated that their willingness and ability to follow-through with treatment entry were influenced by multidimensional (Marlowe, Merikle, Kirby, Festinger, & McLellan, 2001) and interacting factors. Participants identified influence factors that included intra- and interpersonal concerns, the quality of interactions with state agencies, and treatment-specific issues. Results are presented along with suggestions for counselors and future research. 2008-05-16 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cps_diss/23 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1022&context=cps_diss Counseling and Psychological Services Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU gender race sociocultural motivation referral therapeutic alliance discrimination custody oppression Black feminist womanist shame rapport criminal justice system child protective services socioeconomic status SES social support Student Counseling and Personnel Services
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic gender
race
sociocultural
motivation
referral
therapeutic alliance
discrimination
custody
oppression
Black feminist
womanist
shame
rapport
criminal justice system
child protective services
socioeconomic status
SES
social support
Student Counseling and Personnel Services
spellingShingle gender
race
sociocultural
motivation
referral
therapeutic alliance
discrimination
custody
oppression
Black feminist
womanist
shame
rapport
criminal justice system
child protective services
socioeconomic status
SES
social support
Student Counseling and Personnel Services
Newton, Kathryn
African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors
description African American women, in particular those who are economically marginalized, are disproportionately subject to surveillance by social service and criminal justice agencies (James et al., 2003) and are vulnerable to race- and gender-biased policy implementation (Chibnall et al., 2003; Zerai, 2002). They also experience population-specific personal (Ehrmin, 2001, 2002), social (Riehman, Iguchi, Zeller, & Morral, 2003; MacMaster, 2005), and economic barriers (Tighe & Saxe, 2006) to accessing and entering substance abuse treatment services. These factors contribute to lower rates of treatment entry follow-through (Siqueland et al., 2002) and higher drop-out rates (Scott-Lennox, Rose, Bohlig, & Lennox, 2000) than women from other racial and ethnic groups. This qualitative study explored African American women’s perceptions of mandated referral to substance abuse treatment and the impact of those perceptions on their treatment entry. The sample included 17 women age 18 years and over who were currently enrolled at three gender-specific treatment programs (one intensive outpatient and two residential) in a major southeastern urban area. This naturalistic inquiry (Lincoln and Guba, 1987) was informed by Black feminist epistemology (Collins, 2000) in accordance with recommendations for culturally sensitive research with women of color (Landrine, Klonoff, & Brown-Collins, 1995). Participants completed one-time, in-depth (one to two hour) interviews in which they were invited to explore their experiences with mandated substance abuse treatment referrals from state agencies (child protective services and the criminal justice system). Results indicate that participants generally perceived the treatment mandate as helpful. However, they also indicated that their willingness and ability to follow-through with treatment entry were influenced by multidimensional (Marlowe, Merikle, Kirby, Festinger, & McLellan, 2001) and interacting factors. Participants identified influence factors that included intra- and interpersonal concerns, the quality of interactions with state agencies, and treatment-specific issues. Results are presented along with suggestions for counselors and future research.
author Newton, Kathryn
author_facet Newton, Kathryn
author_sort Newton, Kathryn
title African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors
title_short African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors
title_full African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors
title_fullStr African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors
title_full_unstemmed African American Women's Perceptions of and Experiences with Mandated Substance Abuse Treatment: Implications for Counselors
title_sort african american women's perceptions of and experiences with mandated substance abuse treatment: implications for counselors
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2008
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cps_diss/23
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1022&context=cps_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT newtonkathryn africanamericanwomensperceptionsofandexperienceswithmandatedsubstanceabusetreatmentimplicationsforcounselors
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