Hammett Theodore M, Drachman-Jones Abigail
Abt Associates Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1168, USA.
Sex Transm Dis. 2006 Jul;33(7 Suppl):S17-22. doi: 10.1097/01.olq.0000218852.83584.7f.
The objective of this study was to explore the relationships between incarceration and emerging increases in HIV and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in the rural south, particularly among black women of low socioeconomic status.
The study used secondary data on correctional populations, incarceration rates, admissions to correctional facilities (prisons and jails), HIV and STD prevalence among inmates, and national and state HIV surveillance data.
Simultaneous consideration of these disparate data suggests some important patterns. Nationally, increasing proportions of inmates are women, and blacks and Latinos/as of low socioeconomic status are disproportionately represented in inmate populations. Incarceration rates are higher in the south (790 per 100,000) than in other regions and, within the south, rates are about the same for rural and urban counties (1194 and 1160). The prevalences of HIV and STDs are higher among female than male inmates (for HIV, approximately 3% to 2% nationally), and among the highest regional burdens of HIV are found among releasees from southern correctional facilities (26% of all people living with HIV in the south in 1999 were released from a prison or jail that same year) and among southern women releasees (15% of all women with HIV were correctional releasees). Taken together, these figures suggest that many southern women with HIV/AIDS and STDs, especially poor black women from rural areas, are found in prisons and jails, perhaps more so than in other parts of the country. At the same time, only small percentages of newly reported cases of AIDS among women in the south are diagnosed in correctional facilities (0.6-7%, depending on the state).
Given the concentrations of rural black women with HIV/AIDS and STDs in southern correctional facilities, it is important to recognize that prisons and jails are critical settings in which to deploy programs for the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of infectious diseases and other health problems. Such interventions, as well as interventions focused on the rural communities themselves, would benefit not only inmates and releasees, but also the larger public health.
本研究的目的是探讨美国南部农村地区监禁与艾滋病毒和性传播疾病(STD)新发病例增加之间的关系,特别是在社会经济地位较低的黑人女性中。
该研究使用了关于惩教人口、监禁率、惩教设施(监狱)收押人数、囚犯中的艾滋病毒和性传播疾病患病率以及国家和州艾滋病毒监测数据的二手数据。
同时考虑这些不同的数据揭示了一些重要模式。在全国范围内,女性囚犯的比例不断增加,社会经济地位较低的黑人和拉丁裔在囚犯群体中所占比例过高。南部的监禁率(每10万人中有790人)高于其他地区,在南部,农村和城市县的监禁率大致相同(分别为每10万人中有1194人和1160人)。女性囚犯中的艾滋病毒和性传播疾病患病率高于男性囚犯(就艾滋病毒而言,全国范围内约为3%至2%),南部惩教设施释放人员中的艾滋病毒区域负担最重(1999年南部所有艾滋病毒感染者中有26%是同年从监狱释放的),南部女性释放人员中也是如此(所有感染艾滋病毒的女性中有15%是惩教释放人员)。综合来看,这些数据表明,许多感染艾滋病毒/艾滋病和性传播疾病的南部女性,尤其是农村贫困黑人女性,都在监狱中,这一比例可能高于该国其他地区。与此同时,南部女性中新增艾滋病病例在惩教设施中被诊断出的比例很小(0.6%至7%,因州而异)。
鉴于南部惩教设施中集中了感染艾滋病毒/艾滋病和性传播疾病的农村黑人女性,必须认识到监狱是部署传染病预防、诊断和治疗以及其他健康问题项目的关键场所。此类干预措施以及针对农村社区本身的干预措施,不仅将使囚犯和释放人员受益,也将使更广泛的公共卫生受益。