Opioid-related deaths and substance use continue to challenge courts and communities across the United States. In response, one state, New York, developed a Opioid Intervention Court (OIC), designed to rapidly identify individuals with opioid use disorder (OUD) and link them to evidence-based treatment, including medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD).
A recent stepped‑wedge randomized controlled trial (RCT) study evaluated the effectiveness of this model, and demonstrated significant outcome improvements [1][1] This study offers important information for justice professionals who are addressing OUD.
Ten Essential Elements of an Opioid Intervention Court
These OICs have as a foundation Ten Essential Elements:[2]
- Broad legal eligibility ensures that clinical need, not solely charge type, drives participation.
- Immediate screening for overdose risk occurs at or near arraignment, using validated tools to identify individuals at the highest risk of fatal overdose.
- Informed consent follows consultation with defense counsel so that entry into the court program is voluntary and fully understood.
- Suspension of prosecution or expedited plea allows participants to focus on stabilization rather than legal proceedings.
- Rapid clinical assessment and treatment engagement connects participants to care quickly, with evidence-based MOUD offered as standard practice.
- Recovery support services—including peer recovery advocates and family support navigators—help participants address needs beyond clinical treatment.
- Frequent judicial supervision and compliance monitoring creates structure and accountability, emphasizing support over punishment.
- Intensive case management coordinates care and links participants to community resources, including housing, employment, and transportation.
- Program completion and continuing care focus on short-term stabilization, generally within 90 days, with warm handoffs to ongoing treatment courts or community-based services.
- Performance evaluation and program improvement rely on real-time data to monitor program outcomes and drive continuous quality improvement.
These elements distinguish opioid intervention courts from traditional drug courts by emphasizing speed, stabilization, and health-based support, rather than compliance-focused sanctioning. So, unlike traditional courts, which often require participants to plead guilty and gradually advance through treatment and supervision, OICs, applying these 10 elements, focus on immediate stabilization and overdose prevention. Prosecutorial action is paused or fast-tracked, and participants are rapidly assessed and connected to treatment, often within 24 hours of arrest. This shift moves the court from a primarily punitive structure to one prioritizing health and safety.

A Study of an Opioid Intervention Court
A study conducted about the effectiveness of these courts found that participants in OICs entered treatment significantly faster than those even in traditional drug courts, with a fourfold increase in linkage to MOUD. More than 80 percent of OIC participants began MOUD, compared to 46 percent in standard drug court programs. Participants also remained engaged in both treatment and court supervision for longer periods, supporting program stability and leading to higher completion rates.[3] While recidivism data was still being finalized, early indicators suggest lower rates of reoffending, consistent with research showing that MOUD reduces criminal activity.[4] Although these courts require additional resources to establish rapid screening, daily judicial supervision, and intensive case management, preliminary analysis indicates that these costs are offset by savings resulting from fewer overdoses, reduced emergency service utilization, and decreased rates of repeated incarceration.
Why this Matters
The opioid epidemic continues to place enormous pressure on local courts, public health systems, and law enforcement. The OIC model demonstrates that courts can be a gateway to life-saving treatment rather than a revolving door of incarceration.
By prioritizing immediate screening, voluntary participation, rapid treatment engagement, and recovery support, these courts provide a pathway to stabilization and improved long-term outcomes for individuals and communities.For jurisdictions considering implementing or refining their own opioid response, the study establishes CIDs applying the Ten Essential Elements offer a clear operational framework grounded in evidence and public health principles. This approach is scalable across urban, suburban, and rural courts, and the study appears to demonstrate its effectiveness in improving public safety.
As this research shows, courts that adopt this approach can expect faster treatment initiation, higher use of proven medications, improved retention, and a healthier, safer community.
[1] Elkington, K. S., Morrissey, M., Ferrando, S. J., St. Jacques, A., Cao, D., Witas, J., & DiMaggio, C. (2021). Stepped-wedge randomized controlled trial of a novel opioid court to improve identification of need and linkage to medications for opioid use disorder treatment for court-involved adults. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 133, 108515.
[2] [2] New York State Unified Court System & Center for Court Innovation. (2019). The 10 Essential Elements of Opioid Intervention Courts.
[3] Elkington et al.
[4] Id.
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