Showing posts with label Incarcerated. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Incarcerated. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

The Rikers Island Hot Spotters: Defining the Needs of the Most Frequently Incarcerated

We used "hot spotting" to characterize the persons most frequently admitted to the New York City jail system in 2013.

We used our Correctional Health Services electronic health record to identify 800 patients admitted in 2013 who returned most since November 2008. We compared them to a randomly selected control group of 800 others admitted in 2013, by using descriptive statistics and cross-tabulations, including data through December 2014.

The frequently incarcerated individuals had a median of 21 incarcerations (median duration 11 days), representing 18 713 admissions and $129 million in custody and health costs versus $38 million for the controls. The frequently incarcerated were: 
  • significantly older (42 vs 35 years), 
  • and more likely to have serious mental illness (19% vs 8.5%) 
  • and homelessness (51.5% vs 14.7%) in their record. 
  • Significant substance use was highly prevalent (96.9% vs 55.6%). 
  • Most top criminal charges (88.7%) for the frequently incarcerated were misdemeanors; assault charges were less common (2.8% vs 10.4%). 

Frequently incarcerated persons have chronic mental health and substance use problems, their charges are generally minor, and incarceration is costly. Tailored supportive housing is likely to be less costly and improve outcomes.


Via: http://ht.ly/SB6Xh Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/tg5GQO

  • 1All of the authors are with the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Bureau of Correctional Health Services, Queens, NY.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Self-Reported Health among Recently Incarcerated Mothers

In adjusted logistic regression models, recently incarcerated mothers, compared with their counterparts, have an increased likelihood of depression, heavy drinking, fair or poor health, and health limitations. This association is similar across racial/ethnic subgroups and is larger among mothers who share children with fathers who have not been recently incarcerated.

Recently incarcerated mothers struggle with even more health conditions than expected given the disadvantages they experience before incarceration. Furthermore, because incarceration is concentrated among those who are most disadvantaged, incarceration may increase inequalities in population health.

Via:  http://ht.ly/QXy7f HT @ucirvinesocsci

Psychological Distress among Victimized Women on Probation and Parole: A Latent Class Analysis

Below:  Standardized mean scores of three subgroups of victimized women on probation and parole across nine latent class indicator variables


Latent class analysis was used to identify subgroups of victimized women (N=406) on probation and parole differentiated by levels of general psychological distress. The nine primary symptom dimensions from the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) were used individually as latent class indicators (). Results identified three classes of women characterized by increasing levels of psychological distress; classes were further differentiated by posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms, cumulative victimization, substance use and other domains of psychosocial functioning (i.e., sociodemographic characteristics; informal social support and formal service utilization; perceived life stress; and resource loss). The present research was effective in uncovering important heterogeneity in psychological distress using a highly reliable and easily accessible measure of general psychological distress. Differentiating levels of psychological distress and associated patterns of psychosocial risk can be used to develop intervention strategies targeting the needs of different subgroups of women. Implications for treatment and future research are presented.

Women are among the fastest growing segment of the correctional population. At present, over 200,000 women are incarcerated and more than 1 million women are on probation (). Approximately one out of every 89 women in the U.S. is involved in the criminal justice system and over 85% are sanctioned within the community...

Read more at:   http://ht.ly/QXrDt HT @uofl 

Friday, July 31, 2015

Health Priorities among Women Recently Released from Jail

Below:  Priorities among Women Recently Released from Jail



Five out of 28 women listed health as their top post-release priority. However, many women had competing priorities after release, including housing, employment, and children. We found that women described several reasons why health was not a priority; however, participants reported regular use of the healthcare system upon release from jail, indicating that health was important to them to some degree.

Our findings may inform intervention efforts that connect women to healthcare resources and increase health-promoting behavior during the transition from jail to community.

Via http://ht.ly/JWEg8 HT @KUMedicine