Delinquency detour: treating mental illness in young people can keep them from a future of crime and delinquency.

AuthorHammond, Sarah

As many as 70 percent of youths in juvenile justice systems have some kind of mental disorder, according to Joseph J. Cocozza, director of the National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice. One in five suffers from a mental illness so severe that it impairs their ability to function as a young person and grow into a responsible adult.

Young people can have conduct, mood, anxiety and substance abuse disorders. Sometimes illness from substance abuse "cooccurs" with another mental illness. Such disorders often lead to troublesome behavior and delinquent acts.

Without treatment, these young people continue in delinquency and often become adult criminals. The Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that more than three-quarters of the mentally ill offenders in jail had prior offenses. Effective assessment and comprehensive responses to court-involved juveniles with mental health needs is necessary to help break this cycle and provide for healthier young people who are less likely to commit crimes, Cocozza says.

Mental health disorders are more complicated and difficult to treat in young people than in adults because of the physical and mental changes taking place in adolescence. Ongoing assessment and treatment are important.

SENATOR

JAMES HARGROVE

WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON'S EFFORT

Washington helps young offenders with mental illnesses through a law legislators passed in 2005, committing $46 million to improving mental health services for both adults and kids in the criminal justice system. Some of that money replaced losses in federal funds, says Senator James Hargrove, lead sponsor of the omnibus mental health act and chair of the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee. The money supports policy to get tough on crime by preventing crime and delinquency, he says. Lawmakers were motivated by prevention, the major impetus for the legislation.

"Prevention is the key," Hargrove says. "If we give juveniles appropriate treatment, then we can keep kids out of criminal justice systems down the road. This saves a lot of money for taxpayers and it saves victims."

The legislation authorizes counties to levy a 0.1 cent sales tax for therapeutic courts and mental health and chemical dependency treatment. To date, four counties have implemented the tax.

The state is using these specialized courts to serve young people as well as adults with mental health needs. The King County Treatment Court in Seattle operates with involvement by the...

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