Author:
Hayaki Jumi,Cinq-Mars Haley,Christopher Paul P.,Anderson Bradley J.,Stewart Catherine,Stein Michael D.
Abstract
Objectives
Civil commitment has increasingly served as a court-based legal intervention for severe opioid use, but little research has examined the civil commitment (CC) hearing process from the perspective of the person who is committed. Despite documented gender differences in opioid use and experiences within the legal system, past research has also not investigated gender differences in perceptions of the CC process for persons who use opioids.
Methods
Participants were 121 persons (43% female) with opioid use who were interviewed upon arrival at the CC facility about their experience of the CC hearing process in Massachusetts.
Results
Two thirds of participants were taken to the commitment hearing by police, and 59.5% shared a cell with others while waiting. Overall, the commitment intake process at the courthouse took over 5 hours. Participants spent, on average, less than 15 minutes with their lawyer before the hearing, and a majority of CC hearings lasted less than 15 minutes. Once transferred to a CC facility, opioid withdrawal management began within 4 hours. Compared with women, men reported longer wait times between the hearing and transfer, as well as longer wait times for withdrawal management at the facility (P < 0.05). Women perceived worse interactions with the judge and greater dissatisfaction with the commitment process compared with men (P < 0.05).
Conclusions
There were few gender differences in the experience of CC. However, overall, participants reported a lengthy court process and low levels of perceived procedural justice.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference25 articles.
1. Racial disparities in opioid overdose deaths in Massachusetts;JAMA Netw Open,2022
2. Barriers and facilitators to the use of medications for opioid use disorder: A rapid review;J Gen Intern Med,2020
3. The role of civil commitment in the opioid crisis;J Law Med Ethics,2018
4. Civil commitment experiences among opioid users;Drug Alcohol Depend,2018
5. Nature and utilization of civil commitment for substance abuse in the United States;J Am Acad Psychiatry Law Online,2014