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Effectiveness, Implementation, and Cost of Cognitive Processing Therapy in Prisons
Sponsor: University of Arkansas
Summary
Addiction and trauma exposure are common among the 5.5 million people (1 in 47 adults) in the U.S. who are in prison or under supervision. About 85% of people in prison have a substance use disorder or are there for a drug-related crime, and many have experienced serious trauma before being incarcerated. Posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) are often a result of trauma and are linked to more severe drug use, higher rates of relapse, and increased crime. PTSS and substance use disorder (SUD) each raise the chances of new arrests for people who are justice-involved, showing that addressing trauma and addiction could help reduce repeat offenses and the costs of incarceration. However, treatments for PTSS are rarely available in prisons, and there is little research on whether providing therapy for PTSS in prison can lower drug use, PTSS, or crime after release. The goal of this clinical trial is to see if trauma-focused group therapy (CPT) provided while in prison, can help people after release from prison. The therapy has been adapted for use in prisons (CPT-CJ) and will be compared to trauma focused therapy delivered via a self-help workbook This study will: * test whether a trauma-focused group therapy (CPT-CJ) can reduce post-incarceration drug and alcohol use, mental health issues, and drug-related crime, compared to trauma-focused self-help, * evaluate a strategy called implementation facilitation, which helps support the use of this therapy in prisons, and * measure the cost of the therapies and support strategies to help plan for future expansion. Incarcerated participants (N = 640; 50% female) will be enrolled from \~10 prisons in \~5 states, ensuring variability in population and setting characteristics. They will: * take surveys and answer questions up to 5 times (before starting treatment, right after getting treatment, right before leaving prison, 3 months after leaving prison and 6 months after leaving prison) * complete CPT group therapy or self-help therapy * provide urine samples 3 months and 6 months after leaving prison Prison stakeholders (e.g., prison staff, prison leadership, governmental officials; N = \~15 per site) who will be purposively sampled based on their role in CPT-CJ implementation will also participate in some surveys.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
640
Start Date
2025-07-07
Completion Date
2028-12
Last Updated
2026-01-21
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Group Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT)
Participants in CPT group therapy will learn about trauma and how to change upsetting thoughts related to it. Participants will attend up to a total of 12 sessions held 1-2x/week for 90 minutes. No more than 10 participants will be in a group. In this study, CPT provided is a version that was adapted for prisons.
Control Group Individual trauma focused self-help via workbook
The self-help therapy is a therapy that people do on their own using a workbook. By reading and doing practice assignments in the workbook, people can learn skills to recover from trauma.
Locations (6)
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Northeast Arkansas Community Corrections Center (NEACC)
Osceola, Arkansas, United States
Southwest Arkansas Community Correction Center
Texarkana, Arkansas, United States
East Central Arkansas Community Correction Center
West Memphis, Arkansas, United States
North Dakota State Penitentiary (NDSP)
Bismarck, North Dakota, United States
Heart River Correctional Center (HRCC)
Bismarck, North Dakota, United States