VA New England Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center, 950 Campbell Ave., 151D, West Haven, CT, 06516, USA,
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2013 Nov;48(11):1777-86. doi: 10.1007/s00127-013-0677-z. Epub 2013 Mar 19.
Unprecedented growth in the US prison population has highlighted the overrepresentation of racial/ethnic minorities in prisons. This study examined the hypothesis that veteran status is protective against incarceration for veterans of different racial/ethnic minorities and compared the clinical characteristics of incarcerated veterans by race/ethnicity.
Using national data from a prisoner re-entry program and data from the 2010 National Survey of Veterans, this study examined the risk of incarceration among veterans who were racial/ethnic minorities and compared sociodemographic and clinical characteristics to White incarcerated veterans.
Of a sample of 30,834 incarcerated veterans, 52 % were White, 39 % African American, 7 % Hispanic, and 2 % were categorized as "Other." African American veterans were 5.6 times and Hispanic veterans 4.3 times more likely to be incarcerated than White veterans across age groups. However, the published odds of being incarcerated as an African American in the general population compared to Whites (6.7 times) is higher, suggesting that veteran status may be somewhat protective against incarceration for African Americans, particularly among certain age groups. Among incarcerated veterans, multivariate analyses found that African American veterans were significantly more likely to have a drug/abuse dependency diagnosis and be currently incarcerated for a drug offense than Whites. Hispanic veterans were significantly more likely to be chronically homeless and also more likely to be incarcerated for a drug offense.
Racial/ethnic differences in incarceration persist among veterans, although are slightly attenuated. Efforts to connect incarcerated veterans with mental health services post-release should be supported, especially in connecting veterans to substance abuse treatment.
美国监狱人口的空前增长突显了少数族裔在监狱中的代表性过高。本研究检验了以下假设,即退伍军人身份对不同种族/族裔的退伍军人的监禁具有保护作用,并比较了按种族/族裔划分的被监禁退伍军人的临床特征。
本研究使用来自囚犯重返社会计划的全国数据以及 2010 年退伍军人全国调查的数据,研究了少数族裔退伍军人被监禁的风险,并将社会人口统计学和临床特征与白人被监禁的退伍军人进行了比较。
在 30834 名被监禁的退伍军人中,52%是白人,39%是非裔美国人,7%是西班牙裔,2%被归类为“其他”。在所有年龄组中,非裔美国退伍军人被监禁的可能性是非裔美国退伍军人的 5.6 倍,西班牙裔退伍军人被监禁的可能性是白人退伍军人的 4.3 倍。然而,与白人相比,在普通人群中被监禁的非裔美国人的出版几率(6.7 倍)更高,这表明退伍军人身份可能对非裔美国人的监禁有一定的保护作用,尤其是在某些年龄组中。在被监禁的退伍军人中,多元分析发现,非裔美国退伍军人更有可能被诊断出有药物/滥用依赖,并且目前因药物犯罪而被监禁,而白人则没有。西班牙裔退伍军人更有可能长期无家可归,也更有可能因药物犯罪而被监禁。
尽管有所减弱,但退伍军人中监禁的种族/族裔差异仍然存在。应该支持为被监禁的退伍军人提供精神健康服务,尤其是为退伍军人提供药物滥用治疗。