Outcomes of a community sector model of reintegration for people with complex needs: a mixed-methods study
Ruth McCausland, Rebecca Reeve, Mindy Sotiri, Lucy Phelan, Vendula Belackova, Sophie Russell

TL;DR
A community support model for people with complex needs exiting prison in Australia significantly reduced their re-incarceration and improved wellbeing.
Contribution
The study introduces and evaluates a community-based reintegration model that reduces criminal justice system contact and saves costs.
Findings
CRC clients experienced a 66% reduction in days in custody and a 63% reduction in new custody episodes.
The model saved an estimated $10–16 million in criminal justice costs annually.
Clients consistently managed drug use, self-care, and relationships during CRC engagement.
Abstract
Re-incarceration rates for people leaving prison in Australia are high, particularly so for those experiencing complex needs including mental health and substance use issues, cognitive disability and homelessness. Effective models of reintegration for this group are needed to reduce incarceration and improve health and wellbeing. This article reports on the outcomes of a mixed-methods evaluation of the Community Restorative Centre’s (CRC) model of intensive casework support for people with complex needs exiting prison in New South Wales, Australia. The evaluation took a mixed-methods approach to assessing the effectiveness of CRC’s model of reintegration support which included five studies: (1) an interrupted time series analysis of 483 clients over an 11-year period to examine changes in custody and court outcomes following engagement with CRC; (2) a comparative interrupted time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHomelessness and Social Issues · Criminal Justice and Corrections Analysis · Geriatric Care and Nursing Homes
