Term Paper on "Court-Ordered Treatments Discussion of DWI"
Term Paper 8 pages (2187 words) Sources: 5 Style: APA
[EXCERPT] . . . .
Court-Ordered TreatmentsDiscussion of DWI Types of Offenders
Selection Criteria
Statistical significance
Timing, Implementation
Questionnaire Key Points
This paper will outline a research proposal designed to study various approaches to reducing drunken driving amongst those who are arrested and convicted on charges of DWI. Long a vexing problem for highway safety and the courts that deal with them, drunken driving has proven difficult for courts; drunken drivers are amongst the worst in recidivism rates amongst all convicted for crimes. Although auto deaths related to drunk driving have declined in the past 20 years from 24,094 (1987) to 17,602 (2006), there has been relatively little progress in the past 10 years, where drink has been associated with deaths in about 40% of all fatal traffic accidents (MADD, 2002).
Complicating DWI treatment is the fact that each state deals with DWI in different ways. There has been relatively little cross-comparison between methods tried in different states. The author proposes to complete a literature search of various court-ordered programs and their announced results, in order to determine the best approaches to be tested. This proposal will address three methods which appear to have had the best success in reducing DWI in other municipalities and states, and to apply those three methods in a major city with rigorous follow-up with the DWI offenders. The expected result is to be able to produce comparable data from all three methods (plus a control arm) which bring less than 10% statistical variation at the 95% confidence
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The author believes that this study is both needed and original. There has been a good deal of literature about alcohol treatment and DWI, but most of the work has been based on a single treatment methodology. In those metastudies where there have been more than one method compared, the studies have generally drawn on different demographics; in many cases, the participants in the study came from different regions or even different countries. Comparing even the same methodologies, such as DWI courts, is difficult across regions and courts due to different methods of application.
In the researcher's opinion, it would be clearer to compare methods of treatment using demographics which are as comparable as possible. In addition, there needs to be uniformity of treatment and sentencing methods. To this end, it would be more valuable to have a statistically significant number of DWI offenders in each "arm" of a study, and to have uniformity of treatment as well.
Discussion of DWI Types of Offenders
While all kinds of DWI offenders can be addressed, the more difficult type of 'criminal' handled is the DWI who suffers from chronic alcoholism. Those who have drunk too much and made a mistake in deciding to drive are more likely to change their future behavior. Chronic alcoholics can prove much more difficult to change; it is imperative to change their behavior, however, as they tend to have higher blood alcohol contents, be more likely to repeat the offense, and be more resistant to changes in their alcohol-consuming habits (Hanson, 2007). Although the literature reveals a number of treatment methodologies available, the researcher felt that it would make the most sense to take well-accepted methodology for three reasons: (1) the methodology in practice can be "normalized," or standardized as much as possible, (2) by choosing well-known treatment methodologies, the results may be less in dispute, and (3) the City of Minneapolis will have a statistically significant sample in each group within the needed timeframe. In this case, statistical validation is important.
The DWI convicts will be subject to four different treatment methodologies. These methods are briefly explained below:
DWI Court: The DWI court has been tried in a number of cities, most prominently Minneapolis, Minnesota, where there has been a claimed reduction in recidivism.
DWI courts are characterized by their specialized judges and sentencing, which are targeted strictly on DWI offenders.
Jail Sentence: Each convicted DWI offender will be incarcerated for 6 months with no possibility of parole. This will require agreement with the sentencing judge and DA over sentencing guidelines; increased concern over DWI and increased freedom to impose such sentences should prove conducive to this solution for a subset of offenders.
Anti-Drinking Program: newly adopted program where offenders will come once a week for a month to receive education on the dangers of drinking, by viewing educational videos and listening to impact panels. This will be held in conjunction with members of Alcoholics Anonymous. Although those convicted of DWI will be required to attend these courses, additional attendance at AA meetings will be voluntary.
Controls. This group will receive a fine, but no jail time, no suspension and no anti-alcohol program. As with the other three groups, their subsequent recidivism and self-proclaimed drinking habits will be assessed on a regular basis.
Methodology
Selection Criteria
This study will randomize those accused of DWI by a Clerk of the Court. He or she will be blinded to the name of the offender until after the decision is made.
Those who are found innocent will be dropped from the study.
Before being tried, those accused of DWI will be asked for the following additional info:
BAC at the time of arrest
Previous convictions or arrests for DWI (to be supplemented by an analysis of court records).
Age, sex and family situation
Whether the person has had exposure to any of the above-mentioned methods for DWI drivers. If "yes" to any of the three, they will not be included in the study
If the presumed DWI offender self-proclaims use of drugs other than alcohol, they will be dropped from the study. If they fail further drug screening tests for common opiates or other drugs, they will subsequently be dropped from the study.
Statistical significance
We will choose the City of Minneapolis for this study for three reasons: (1) they have several thousand DWI convictions per year, (2) they possess the ability to implement all four of the chosen methods of treatment, including DWI court, mandatory jail time and alcohol treatment and (3) there is a willingness on the part of local authorities to find the best methods of treatment, due to a high perceived problem with driving while intoxicated in the City and State.
In order to achieve statistical significance, it will be important to have a statistically meaningful number of DWI convicts in each cohort. A participation of 500 people in each "arm" of the study will lead to a 5% variation at two standard deviations, or in other words the 95% confidence level.
One of the major concerns of this study is compliance with the study protocols. Despite monitoring through the court process, the researchers expect a considerable fall-out due to lack of compliance. A recent study on compliance with alcohol treatment programs demonstrates that only half completed the court-ordered program; while this evidence was gathered in Finland, the author is confident that this compliance rate will be repeated in this study (Aalto, 2000).
Given the results of the above-mentioned study, it will be important to separately monitor the performance of men and women as subgroups, in order to see whether there is a significant sex-based difference in compliance and recidivism, depending on program (Lapham, 2000). There is a concern that by decreasing the subsets even further by sex, confidence levels could increase to 10%; even if these do not meet statistical relevance criteria (P<