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Bowdring MA, Macia KS, Shaffer PM, Smelson D, Blonigen DM. Criminogenic Needs and Legal Problem Severity Among Legal System Involved Veterans. Military medicine. 2024 Jul 3; 189(7-8):e1544-e1551.
BACKGROUND: Many veterans seeking behavioral health services have history of criminal-legal involvement. Research on criminogenic needs of legal system involved veterans is burgeoning. However, most research has relied on cross-sectional examinations and the vast majority of prior work has focused assessment on just one criminogenic need per study. METHODS: The present study evaluated seven key criminogenic needs of legal system involved veterans (N? = 341) enrolled in one of three U.S. Veterans Health Administration residential behavioral health treatment programs. Criminogenic needs and legal problem severity were assessed at baseline, and at 6?months and 12?months post-baseline. Directionality of associations between participants'' criminogenic needs and legal problem severity was examined using latent change score models. RESULTS: Results revealed having more antisocial associates at a previous timepoint was associated with greater subsequent improvements in legal problem severity ($\beta $ = -0.01, P? < 0.02) and greater improvements in legal problem severity predicted greater subsequent improvements in alcohol problem severity ($\beta $ = 0.13, P? < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: In one of the most comprehensive single-study assessments of criminogenic needs among a sample of legal system involved veterans, results highlight links between antisocial associates and alcohol problem severity with legal problem severity.