Abstract
Fighting on the front lines against the opioid crisis for over three decades now, law enforcement agencies are increasingly shifting away from a strictly enforcement-based approach in favor of a public health model focused on both prevention and intervention. Embracing this new approach, many police departments are collaborating with non-traditional law enforcement partners, such as recovery coaches. Although many police departments across the nation are currently engaging in, or strongly considering, a police-recovery coach collaboration, there is little research regarding police attitudes toward this type of partnership. Therefore, this study examines police views on incorporating recovery coaches into the police station for collaboration as well as what variables predict positive views toward this collaboration. To answer these questions, officers from three New England states were electronically surveyed. Findings showed that approximately half of officers supported recovery coaches working in the police station, with variables related to demographics, addiction exposure, and views on policing predicting officer viewpoints toward collaborating with recovery coaches in this manner. The findings of this study are not only valuable to police leaders as they contemplate partnering with members of the recovery community, but to the larger criminal justice system as successful police-recovery coach partnerships can positively impact the success of individuals who are suffering from substance use disorder in their reentry efforts.
Document Type
Original Research Article
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License
Number of Tables
3
Number of Words
8414
Recommended Citation
Becker, L. T., & Varano, S. P. (2022). Let’s Work Together: Police Views on Collaborating with Recovery Coaches. Journal of Restoration, Rehabilitation, and Reentry, 2022(1). Retrieved from https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/jr3/vol2022/iss1/2