4.5 Article

How Health Care Reform Can Transform The Health Of Criminal Justice-Involved Individuals

Journal

HEALTH AFFAIRS
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages 462-467

Publisher

PROJECT HOPE
DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2013.1133

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Justice
  2. John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
  3. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
  4. National Institute on Drug Abuse [NIDA K24DA022112, NIDA 5R01DA030778, NIDA U01 DA016213]
  5. Centers for AIDS Research, National Institutes of Health [CFAR P30AI042853]
  6. National Institute on Aging [NIA K23AG033102]
  7. Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation
  8. University of California, San Francisco, Program for the Aging Century
  9. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [NHLBI K23 HL103720]
  10. Bureau of Justice Assistance [BJA 2009-DG-BX-K026]
  11. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [NICHHD R01 HD054890]

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Provisions of the Affordable Care Act offer new opportunities to apply a public health and medical perspective to the complex relationship between involvement in the criminal justice system and the existence of fundamental health disparities. Incarceration can cause harm to individual and community health, but prisons and jails also hold enormous potential to play an active and beneficial role in the health care system and, ultimately, to improving health. Traditionally, incarcerated populations have been incorrectly viewed as isolated and self-contained communities with only peripheral importance to the public health at large. This misconception has resulted in missed opportunities to positively affect the health of both the individuals and the imprisoned community as a whole and potentially to mitigate risk behaviors that may contribute to incarceration. Both community and correctional health care professionals can capitalize on these opportunities by working together to advocate for the health of the criminal justice-involved population and their communities. We present a set of recommendations for the improvement of both correctional health care, such as improving systems of external oversight and quality management, and access to community-based care, including establishing strategies for postrelease care and medical record transfers.

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