Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.
Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
JAMA Netw Open. 2021 May 3;4(5):e2111821. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.11821.
More than half of the adult population in the United States has ever had a family member incarcerated, an experience more common among Black individuals. The impacts of family incarceration on well-being are not fully understood.
To assess the associations of incarceration of a family member with perceived well-being and differences in projected life expectancy.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This nationally representative cross-sectional study used data from the 2018 Family History of Incarceration Survey to examine how experiences of family member incarceration were associated with a holistic measure of well-being, including physical, mental, social, financial, and spiritual domains. Well-being was used to estimate change in life expectancy and was compared across varying levels of exposure to immediate and extended family member incarceration using logistic regression models to adjust for individual and household characteristics. Data were analyzed from October 2019 to April 2020.
Respondents' history of family member incarceration, including immediate and extended family members.
The main outcome was self-reported life-evaluation, a measure of overall well-being from the 100 Million Healthier Lives Adult Well-being Assessment. Respondents were considered thriving with a current life satisfaction score of 7 or greater and a future life optimism score of 8 or greater, each on a scale of 0 to 10. Other outcomes included physical health, mental health, social support, financial well-being, and spiritual well-being, each measured with separate scales. Additionally, life expectancy projections were estimated using population-level correlations with the Life Evaluation Index. All percentages were weighted to more closely represent the US population.
Of 2815 individuals included in analysis, 1472 (51.7%) were women, 1765 (62.8%) were non-Hispanic White, and 868 (31.5%) were aged 35 to 54 years. A total of 1806 respondents (45.0%) reported having an immediate family member who was incarcerated. Compared with respondents with no family incarceration, any family member incarceration was associated with lower well-being overall (thriving: 69.5% [95% CI, 65.0%-75.0%] vs 56.9% [95% CI, 53.9%-59.9%]) and in every individual domain (eg, physical thriving: 51.1% [95% CI, 46.2-56.0] vs 35.5% [95% CI, 32.6%-38.3%]) and with a mean (SE) estimated 2.6 (0.03) years shorter life expectancy. Among those with any family incarceration, Black respondents had a mean (SE) estimated 0.46 (0.04) fewer years of life expectancy compared with White respondents.
These findings suggest that family member health and well-being may be an important avenue through which incarceration is associated with racial disparities in health and mortality. Decarceration efforts may improve population-level well-being and life expectancy by minimizing detrimental outcomes associated with incarceration among nonincarcerated family members.
超过一半的美国成年人曾有过家庭成员入狱的经历,这种经历在黑人中更为常见。家庭成员入狱对幸福感的影响尚未完全了解。
评估家庭成员入狱与感知幸福感和预期寿命差异的关联。
设计、地点和参与者:这项全国性代表性的横断面研究使用了 2018 年家庭监禁史调查的数据,研究了家庭成员入狱经历与包括身体、心理、社会、经济和精神在内的整体幸福感之间的关联。幸福感用于估计预期寿命的变化,并使用逻辑回归模型比较了不同程度的直接和间接家庭成员入狱经历的差异,以调整个体和家庭特征。数据于 2019 年 10 月至 2020 年 4 月进行分析。
受访者的家庭成员入狱史,包括直系亲属和旁系亲属。
主要结果是自我报告的生活评估,这是 1 亿人更健康生活成人幸福感评估中的一个整体幸福感衡量标准。受访者被认为是蓬勃发展的,如果他们目前的生活满意度评分在 7 或更高,并且未来的生活乐观评分在 8 或更高,每个评分的范围在 0 到 10 之间。其他结果包括身体健康、心理健康、社会支持、经济福祉和精神福祉,每个都用单独的量表衡量。此外,还使用与生活评估指数的人口水平相关性来估计预期寿命。所有百分比都经过加权,以更接近美国人口。
在纳入分析的 2815 人中,1472 人(51.7%)为女性,1765 人(62.8%)为非西班牙裔白人,868 人(31.5%)年龄在 35 至 54 岁之间。共有 1806 名受访者(45.0%)报告有直系亲属入狱。与没有家庭监禁的受访者相比,任何家庭成员的监禁都与整体幸福感降低有关(蓬勃发展:69.5%[95%CI,65.0%-75.0%] vs 56.9%[95%CI,53.9%-59.9%]),并且在每个个体领域(例如,身体蓬勃发展:51.1%[95%CI,46.2-56.0%] vs 35.5%[95%CI,32.6%-38.3%]),预期寿命平均估计缩短了 2.6(0.03)年。在有任何家庭监禁的人中,黑人受访者的预期寿命比白人受访者平均(SE)估计缩短了 0.46(0.04)年。
这些发现表明,家庭成员的健康和幸福感可能是入狱与健康和死亡率方面的种族差异相关的一个重要途径。通过将与非入狱家庭成员相关的监禁的不利后果降到最低,减少监禁努力可能会提高人口的幸福感和预期寿命。