Topp Stephanie M, Moonga Clement N, Luo Nkandu, Kaingu Michael, Chileshe Chisela, Magwende George, Heymann S Jody, Henostroza German
Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia, PO Box 30346, Lusaka, Zambia; James Cook University, School of Public Health Medical and Veterinary Sciences, Douglas, QLD, 4810, Australia,
Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia, PO Box 30346, Lusaka, Zambia.
Health Policy Plan. 2016 Nov;31(9):1250-61. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czw059. Epub 2016 May 24.
Prison populations in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) experience a high burden of disease and poor access to health care. Although it is generally understood that environmental conditions are dire and contribute to disease spread, evidence of how environmental conditions interact with facility-level social and institutional factors is lacking. This study aimed to unpack the nature of interactions and their influence on health and healthcare access in the Zambian prison setting.
We conducted in-depth interviews of a clustered random sample of 79 male prisoners across four prisons, as well as 32 prison officers, policy makers and health care workers. Largely inductive thematic analysis was guided by the concepts of dynamic interaction and emergent behaviour, drawn from the theory of complex adaptive systems.
A majority of inmates, as well as facility-based officers reported anxiety linked to overcrowding, sanitation, infectious disease transmission, nutrition and coercion. Due in part to differential wealth of inmates and their support networks on entering prison, and in part to the accumulation of authority and material wealth within prison, we found enormous inequity in the standard of living among prisoners at each site. In the context of such inequities, failure of the Zambian prison system to provide basic necessities (including adequate and appropriate forms of nutrition, or access to quality health care) contributed to high rates of inmate-led and officer-led coercion with direct implications for health and access to healthcare.
This systems-oriented analysis provides a more comprehensive picture of the way resource shortages and human interactions within Zambian prisons interact and affect inmate and officer health. While not a panacea, our findings highlight some strategic entry-points for important upstream and downstream reforms including urgent improvement in the availability of human resources for health; strengthening of facility-based health services systems and more comprehensive pre-service health education for prison officers.
撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)的监狱人口面临着沉重的疾病负担,且获得医疗保健的机会有限。尽管人们普遍认为监狱环境恶劣且助长了疾病传播,但缺乏关于环境条件如何与设施层面的社会和制度因素相互作用的证据。本研究旨在剖析赞比亚监狱环境中相互作用的本质及其对健康和医疗保健获取的影响。
我们对来自四个监狱的79名男性囚犯以及32名狱警、政策制定者和医护人员进行了整群随机抽样的深入访谈。主要采用归纳主题分析法,其指导概念源于复杂适应系统理论中的动态相互作用和涌现行为概念。
大多数囚犯以及狱内工作人员表示,过度拥挤、卫生条件、传染病传播、营养和强制管理等因素导致了焦虑情绪。部分原因是囚犯及其入狱时支持网络的财富差异,部分原因是监狱内部权力和物质财富的积累,我们发现每个监狱地点的囚犯生活水平存在巨大不平等。在这种不平等的背景下,赞比亚监狱系统未能提供基本生活必需品(包括充足和适当的营养形式,或获得优质医疗保健)导致囚犯主导和狱警主导的强制管理发生率很高,并直接影响健康和医疗保健的获取。
这种以系统为导向的分析更全面地描绘了赞比亚监狱内资源短缺与人际互动相互作用并影响囚犯和狱警健康的方式。虽然并非万灵药,但我们的研究结果突出了一些重要上游和下游改革的战略切入点,包括紧急改善卫生人力资源的可及性;加强狱内卫生服务系统以及为狱警提供更全面的岗前健康教育。