journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37615878/hiv-related-risk-among-justice-involved-young-african-american-women-in-the-u-s-south
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felicia A Browne, Yukiko Washio, William A Zule, Wendee M Wechsberg
Incarceration rates have increased exponentially among women, and racial disparities in justice involvement persist. Coupled with disparities in HIV in the US South that begin early in the life course, it is important to explicate the relationship between justice involvement, HIV-related risk (such as illicit drug use and sexual risk), and service needs for young African American women. This study examined the association of previous arrest, biological and self-reported HIV-related risk, and reported service needs at baseline among 646 African American women aged 18 to 25 who were recruited as part of an HIV-risk reduction trial...
August 24, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37615818/physicians-and-nurses-professional-relationship-with-criminal-investigation-in-dealing-with-survivors-of-sexual-abuse-a-scoping-review
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nuno Coelho, Anabela Neves, João Gregório
Survivors of sexual abuse and their families seek help from criminal law enforcement agencies and health professionals to obtain justice and health care. Many communities have implemented multi-professional collaborative models so that the victim's well-being is assured and the truth is established. However, there is a general lack of evidence on how to best articulate these teams with the healthcare professionals caring for the survivors.Therefore, this Scoping Review was conducted in order to analyze and to map the barriers and facilitators of the relationship between health professionals and the criminal investigation team in the care of survivors of sexual abuse...
August 24, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37603194/organizational-access-points-and-substance-use-disorder-treatment-utilization-among-black-women-a-longitudinal-cohort-study
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sugy Choi, Amanda Bunting, Talia Nadel, Charles J Neighbors, Carrie B Oser
INTRODUCTION: Health and social service organizations, including the emergency department (ED) and public assistance programs, constitute a social safety net that may serve as an "access point" for substance use treatment utilization. Racialization of substance use disorder (SUD) and gender disparities in access to treatment contribute to differences in health and social service utilization, including substance use treatment for Black women. We therefore explored the role of various access points in facilitating the use of substance use treatment among Black women with substance use and involvement in the criminal justice system...
August 21, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37542571/caregiver-and-juvenile-justice-personnel-perspectives-on-challenges-and-importance-of-caregiver-engagement-and-the-potential-utility-of-a-peer-navigator-program-in-the-juvenile-justice-system
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allyson L Dir, Casey Pederson, Shirin Khazvand, Katie Schwartz, Sarah E Wiehe, Matthew C Aalsma
BACKGROUND: For youth involved in the juvenile justice (JJ) system, caregiver involvement and engagement in the system is crucial for youth development and outcomes of JJ cases; however, there are challenges to establishing positive/productive partnerships between caregivers and JJ representatives. The current project examines perspectives of caregivers and JJ personnel regarding facilitators and barriers to establishing JJ-caregiver partnerships, as well as their perceptions of the use of a caregiver navigator program to support caregivers of system-involved youth...
August 5, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37515602/results-of-a-national-survey-of-substance-use-treatment-services-for-youth-under-community-supervision
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Danica K Knight, Rod R Funk, Steven Belenko, Michael Dennis, Amanda L Wiese, John P Bartkowski, Richard Dembo, Katherine S Elkington, Patrick M Flynn, Philip W Harris, Aaron Hogue, Lawrence A Palinkas, Angela A Robertson, Christy K Scott
BACKGROUND: Despite the heightened risk for substance use (SU) among youth in the juvenile justice system, many do not receive the treatment that they need. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study is to examine the extent to which youth under community supervision by juvenile justice agencies receive community-based SU services and the factors associated with access to such services. METHODS: Data are from a nationally representative sample of Community Supervision (CS) agencies and their primary behavioral health (BH) partners...
July 29, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37402079/stigmatizing-imagery-for-substance-use-disorders-a-qualitative-exploration
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Hulsey, Kayla Zawislak, Ginnie Sawyer-Morris, Valerie Earnshaw
BACKGROUND: Stigma is a significant barrier to the treatment of individuals with substance use disorders. While prior efforts have been made to change stigmatizing language to refer to individuals with substance use disorders (SUD), little is known about the effects of stigmatizing imagery. There is a need for complementary qualitative research to identify both stigmatizing and non-stigmatizing imagery in the field of SUD. METHODS: This study used qualitative methods to identify stigmatizing and non-stigmatizing imagery for SUD and explore the reactions of people with lived experience with SUD to SUD-related imagery...
July 4, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37401987/impact-of-county-level-health-infrastructure-on-participation-in-a-reform-effort-to-reduce-the-use-of-jail-for-individuals-with-mental-health-disorders
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Niloofar Ramezani, Maji Hailemariam, Alex J Breno, Benjamin J Mackey, Alison Evans Cuellar, Jennifer E Johnson, Faye S Taxman
BACKGROUND: The national Stepping Up Initiative has attracted over 500 counties interested in reducing the use of jail for individuals with mental health disorders. This paper identifies socioeconomic, criminal legal, and health care factors that predict the likelihood of counties joining Stepping Up. RESULTS: After performing variable selection, logistic regression models were performed on 3,141 U.S. counties. Counties designated as medically underserved and/or mental health staffing shortage areas were less likely to participate in this initiative...
July 4, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37300627/-it-s-a-revolving-door-understanding-the-social-determinants-of-mental-health-as-experienced-by-formerly-incarcerated-people
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shivani Nishar, Esteem Brumfield, Shromona Mandal, Rahul Vanjani, Jon Soske
BACKGROUND: This qualitative study seeks to understand how formerly incarcerated individuals in Rhode Island conceptualize their mental health and perceive obstacles to accessing and utilizing mental health services following recent incarceration. METHODS: We conducted in-depth semi-structured interviews from 2021 to 2022 with 25 people who had been released from incarceration within the past five years. We identified participants using voluntary response and purposive sampling...
June 10, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37191937/the-role-of-substance-use-treatment-in-reducing-stigma-after-release-from-incarceration-a-qualitative-analysis
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kelly E Moore, Janan P Wyatt, Sarah Phillips, Catherine Burke, Chyrell Bellamy, Sherry A McKee
BACKGROUND: People with substance use disorders (SUD) who have been involved in the legal system often experience stigma upon reentry into the community after incarceration. Although substance use treatment can sometimes be a source of stigma, it may also reduce stigma by facilitating connections with providers, reducing distress, or helping people feel more integrated in their community. However, research has rarely examined the potential for treatment to reduce stigma. METHODS: This study examined stigma experiences and the degree to which substance use treatment reduced stigma among 24 people with SUDs who were receiving care in an outpatient treatment facility after release from incarceration...
May 16, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37184615/a-multi-level-intervention-to-reduce-the-stigma-of-substance-use-and-criminal-involvement-a-pilot-feasibility-trial-protocol
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kelly E Moore, Jennifer E Johnson, Jason B Luoma, Faye Taxman, Robert Pack, Patrick Corrigan, Jim Hart, Judge Duane Slone
BACKGROUND: Stigma associated with substance use and criminal involvement is pervasive and creates a barrier to evidence-based addiction care within the criminal legal system. Research has yet to examine a multi-level stigma intervention which targets the intersection of these stigmas among both criminal legal staff and legally-involved clients. METHODS: This paper presents the protocol for a non-randomized trial of a multi-level stigma intervention called Combatting Stigma to Aid Reentry and Recovery (CSTARR) that involves two interventions: (1) training for criminal legal staff to address public stigma and (2) group-based acceptance and commitment therapy to address self-stigma among legally-involved adults enrolled in substance use treatment...
May 15, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37140696/food-and-the-prison-environment-a-meta-ethnography-of-global-first-hand-experiences-of-food-meals-and-eating-in-custody
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Clair Woods-Brown, Kate Hunt, Helen Sweeting
BACKGROUND: Prison foodways offer a unique opportunity to improve the physical and mental health and wellbeing of an underserved population, yet prison food is often rejected in favour of 'junk' food. Improved understanding of the meanings of food in prison is necessary to inform prison food policy and enhance the prison environment. RESULTS: A meta-ethnographic synthesis of 27 papers integrated first-hand experiences of food in prison from 10 different countries...
May 4, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37058181/the-association-between-drug-use-and-mortality-in-a-norwegian-prison-cohort-a-prospective-cohort-study
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Torill Tverborgvik, Marianne Riksheim Stavseth, Anne Bukten
BACKGROUND: Elevated mortality rates are found among people who have experienced incarceration, even long after release from prison. The mechanisms related to this excess mortality are complex products of both individual and situational factors. The aim of this study was to describe all-cause and cause-specific mortality among people with a history of imprisonment, and to examine both individual and situational factors associated with mortality. METHODS: In this prospective cohort study we used baseline survey data from the Norwegian Offender Mental Health and Addiction (NorMA) study (N = 733) linked with data from the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry during eight years of follow-up (2013-2021)...
April 14, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37036544/implementation-of-rapid-covid-19-testing-at-massachusetts-trial-courts
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yvane Ngassa, Emma Smyth, Bridget Pickard, Morgan Maner, Lauren Brinkley Rubinstein, Alysse Wurcel
BACKGROUND: COVID-19 shut down trial courts across the country, prolonging case resolution of charged, detained, and incarcerated people. We report on the implementation of rapid COVID-19 testing at Trial Courts in Massachusetts (MA), focusing on the outcomes of adoption and acceptability. METHODS: Guided by the Expert Recommendations in Implementing Change (ERIC) framework, we chose six strategies to guide implementation. After assembling a group of stakeholders, including representatives of the Trial Court, Department of Public Health (DPH) and vendors providing COVID-19 testing, we implemented rapid COVID-19 testing at Trial Court locations in December 2021...
April 10, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37014478/contexts-shaping-misdemeanor-system-interventions-among-people-with-mental-illnesses-qualitative-findings-from-a-multi-site-system-mapping-exercise
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer D Wood, Amy C Watson, Leah Pope, Amanda Warnock, Veronica Nelson, Nili Gesser, Adria Zern, Aaron Stagoff-Belfort, Jason Tan de Bibiana, Michael T Compton
BACKGROUND: People with mental illnesses are disproportionately entangled in the criminal legal system. Historically, this involvement has resulted from minor offending, often accompanied by misdemeanor charges. In recent years, policymakers have worked to reduce the footprint of the criminal legal system. This paper seeks to better understand how misdemeanor systems intervene in the lives of people with mental illnesses. METHODS: System mapping exercises were conducted with misdemeanor system stakeholders from the jurisdictions of Atlanta, Chicago, Manhattan, and Philadelphia...
April 4, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37004620/sex-differences-in-pre-incarceration-mental-illness-substance-use-injury-and-sexually-transmitted-infections-and-health-service-utilization-a-longitudinal-linkage-study-of-people-serving-federal-sentences-in-ontario
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tenzin Butsang, Arthur McLuhan, Leslie A Keown, Kinwah Fung, Flora I Matheson
BACKGROUND: People who experience incarceration have poorer health than the general population. Yet, we know little about the health and health service utilization of people during the critical period prior to their incarceration, relative to during incarceration and post-release. In this study, we conducted a longitudinal cohort study of 39,498 adults in Ontario, Canada between January 1, 2002, and December 31, 2011 using linked administrative health and correctional data to describe mental illness, substance use, injury, sexually transmitted infections and health service utilization of men and women in federal prisons in the 3 years prior to their incarceration, compared to a matched group...
April 1, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36995422/collateral-consequences-of-covid-19-for-people-on-probation-and-parole
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katherine LeMasters, Angela Benson, Christopher Corsi, Taylor Krajewski, Kapriskie Seide, Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein, Kathryn Nowotny
BACKGROUND: While the severe detrimental impact of COVID-19 on incarcerated people is well known, little is known about the experience of COVID-19 on those on community supervision. Our objective was to better understand the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic and its collateral consequences for those on community supervision (e.g., probation, parole). Beginning in December 2020, we conducted 185 phone surveys about COVID-19 with participants in The Southern Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Study across its three sites - Florida, Kentucky, and North Carolina...
March 30, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36914913/effectiveness-of-interventions-to-improve-employment-for-people-released-from-prison-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catriona Connell, Mary Birken, Hannah Carver, Tamara Brown, Jessica Greenhalgh
BACKGROUND: People released from prison experience complex health challenges in addition to challenges resettling into the community. Consequently, employment rates are low. Participating in good quality employment can support good health and is protective against future reoffending. Multiple interventions are provided to support people into employment on release. The effectiveness of interventions for improving employment outcomes has not previously been evaluated in a meta-analysis...
March 14, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36913159/covid-19-vaccine-acceptance-among-individuals-incarcerated-in-connecticut-state-jails
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Margaret L Lind, Byron S Kennedy, Murilo Dorion Nieto, Amy J Houde, Peri Sosensky, Ryan Borg, Derek A T Cummings, Albert I Ko, Robert P Richeson
BACKGROUND: Vaccine hesitancy is common among incarcerated populations and, despite vaccination programs, vaccine acceptance within residents remains low, especially within jails. With the goal of assessing the Connecticut DOC's COVID-19 vaccine program within jails we examined if residents of DOC operated jails were more likely to become vaccinated following incarceration than in the community. Specifically, we conducted a retrospective cohort analysis among people who spent at least one night in a DOC-operated jail between February 2 and November 8, 2021, and were eligible for vaccination at the time of incarceration (intake)...
March 13, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36884088/-like-an-animal-the-well-being-of-women-living-in-restricted-housing-units
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lindsay R Smith, Sydney Ingel, Danielle S Rudes
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 8, 2023: Health & Justice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36882535/racial-disparities-in-youth-pretrial-detention-a-retrospective-cohort-study-grounded-in-critical-race-theory
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andy Wen, Noah R Gubner, Michelle M Garrison, Sarah Cusworth Walker
BACKGROUND AND METHOD: Pretrial detention makes up 75% of juvenile detention admissions and contributes to the disproportionate contact of minoritized youth in the juvenile carceral system. Given that prior evidence largely examines differences between Black and white youth, this study expands research on disproportionate contact in the pretrial detention setting to Hispanic/Latinx, Indigenous, and Asian youth. With a sample of over 44,000 juvenile cases in a northwest state, we used a generalized linear mixed model to estimate the effect of individual level characteristics while accounting for the random effect of differences at the county level...
March 8, 2023: Health & Justice
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