The Effect of Parole on Methadone Patient Behavior

Abstract
A 7-yr followup of 3 male samples of 1971-1973 methadone maintenance admissions was conducted: a random sample of 100; a sample of 136 who had a minimum of 30 mo. remaining on civil addict parole status at the time of methadone entry; and a matched sample of 136 not on parole. Of those not decreased, 90% were interviewed. The overall sample spent 58% of the nonincarcerated follow-up interval on methadone. This resulted in a large decline in daily heroin use and associated criminal behavior measures. The addition of parole supervision with urine testing resulted in only marginal improvements in behavior over that attributable to maintenance alone; the parole status did significantly reduce the length of intervals of daily heroin use both prior and subsequent to methadone entry.

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