Community involvement in a juvenile partner justice behavioral health

The U.S. juvenile justice system has a number of possible behavioral health service
community linkages for substance abuse and HIV services. However, there have only
been a small number of systemic studies that examine and seek to improve these community
behavioral health linkages for involved youth. Implementation science, as an emerging
area, is a way of identifying, testing, and understanding effective strategies for
translating treatment and prevention evidence-based approaches into community behavioral
health service delivery. The purpose of this presentation, within the context of the
Juvenile Justice-Translating Research Interventions for Adolescents in the Legal System
(JJ-TRIALS) implementation behavioral health trial, is to describe the diverse settings
in which the study will be initiated and how partners are involved in the study design.
State partners include juvenile justice (JJ) and behavioral health services organizations
in seven states (Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, New York, Pennsylvania,
Texas) and the District of Columbia. Factors associated with selection, participation,
and implementing the study in 36 sites will be explored. Each site will include a
JJ agency and up to two community behavioral health service organizations for 7–10
implementation team members representing executive, management, supervisory, and line
staff. JJ partner involvement is helping to design the study protocol that is both
feasible for sites and meets partner needs. Study sites are defined as a county or
service area, which can include multiple counties when behavioral health services
are sparse. Site clusters will be used, which are defined within each state to assure
that each of the six research centers have an equal number of experimental and control
sites to take into account broader contextual factors. Options for defining clusters
include county size, JJ youth population, urban/rural, or type of community supervision
— probation or juvenile drug court. Sites will not be preselected for substance use
or related behavioral health service needs, so youth are included with diverse behavioral
health needs. Two JJ partners have actively participated on the study design work
group, and the protocol has been vetted through partners at steering committee meetings
and conference calls.