Somers Julian M, Rezansoff Stefanie N, Moniruzzaman Akm, Zabarauckas Carmen
Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC Canada.
Department of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC Canada.
Emerg Themes Epidemiol. 2015 Dec 18;12:17. doi: 10.1186/s12982-015-0040-9. eCollection 2015.
A subgroup of individuals becomes entrenched in a "revolving door" involving corrections, health, and social welfare services. Little research has investigated the numbers of people that are in frequent contact with multiple public agencies, the costs associated with these encounters, or the characteristics of the people concerned. The present study used linked administrative data to examine offenders who were also very frequent users of health and social services. We investigated the magnitude and distribution of costs attributable to different categories of service for those in the top 10 % of sentences to either community or custodial settings. We hypothesized that the members of these subgroups would be significantly more likely to have substance use and other mental disorders than other members of the offender population.
Data were linked across agencies responsible for services to the entire population of British Columbia spanning justice, health, and income assistance. Individuals were eligible for inclusion in the study if they were sentenced at least once in the Vancouver Provincial Court between 2003 and 2012. We examined the subset of participants who fell within the top 10 % of sentences and at least two of the following service categories: community physician services; hospital days; pharmaceutical costs; or income assistance between 2007 and 2012. We examined two groups of offenders separately (those in the top ten percent sentenced to community supervision or to custody) due to differences in time at risk and availability to receive community-based services.
From more than 14,000 offenders sentenced in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, very High Frequency service users associated with community (n = 216) and custody (n = 107) sentences incurred average attributable public service costs of $168,000 and $247,000 respectively over a 5-year period of observation. Health-related costs for both groups were over $80,000 per person, primarily associated with hospital admissions. Across both groups, 99 % had been diagnosed with at least one mental disorder and over 80 % had co-occurring substance use and another mental disorder.
A subset of offenders with concurrent psychiatric disorders receives extremely high levels of service from health, social welfare, and justice sectors in close temporal succession. Members of this subpopulation require targeted supports in order to produce positive outcomes and prevent the perpetuation of a costly and ineffective revolving door.
有一部分人深陷涉及惩教、医疗和社会福利服务的“旋转门”困境。很少有研究调查与多个公共机构频繁接触的人数、这些接触所产生的成本,或者相关人员的特征。本研究使用关联行政数据来研究那些同时也是医疗和社会服务频繁使用者的罪犯。我们调查了在社区或监禁环境中服刑时间排在前10%的罪犯,不同类别服务所产生成本的规模和分布情况。我们假设这些亚组的成员比罪犯群体中的其他成员更有可能患有物质使用障碍和其他精神障碍。
数据来自负责为不列颠哥伦比亚省全体居民提供服务的各机构,涵盖司法、医疗和收入援助领域。如果个体在2003年至2012年期间至少在温哥华省法院被判刑一次,就符合纳入本研究的条件。我们研究了那些服刑时间排在前10%,并且在2007年至2012年期间至少属于以下两个服务类别的参与者子集:社区医生服务、住院天数、药品费用或收入援助。由于处于风险中的时间以及接受社区服务的可及性存在差异,我们分别研究了两组罪犯(被判处社区监管或监禁的前10%)。
在温哥华市中心东区被判刑的14000多名罪犯中,与社区服刑(n = 216)和监禁服刑(n = 107)相关的高频服务使用者在5年观察期内平均产生的公共服务成本分别为16.8万美元和24.7万美元。两组的医疗相关成本人均超过8万美元,主要与住院治疗有关。在两组中,99%的人被诊断患有至少一种精神障碍,超过80%的人同时患有物质使用障碍和另一种精神障碍。
患有并发精神障碍的一部分罪犯在短时间内从医疗、社会福利和司法部门获得了极高水平的服务。这一亚群体的成员需要有针对性的支持,以便产生积极的结果,并防止代价高昂且无效的“旋转门”循环持续下去。