Hawks Laura C, Walker Rebekah J, Egede Leonard E
Division of General Internal Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Center for Advancing Population Science, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Health Equity. 2022 Mar 15;6(1):240-247. doi: 10.1089/heq.2021.0110. eCollection 2022.
Exposure to the criminal legal system is associated with negative health outcomes and profound socioeconomic health disparities. The social adaptability index (SAI) is a validated composite scale based on five indicators of socioeconomic status; a higher score predicts better health outcomes. However, little is known about the relationship between cumulative social risk factors as measured by the SAI and lifetime criminal legal involvement (CLI).
Using a cross-sectional, nationally representative sample of U.S. adults, we calculated SAI score by lifetime CLI status, and used logistic regression with predictive margins to calculate risk of lifetime CLI by SAI quartile adjusting for demographic and clinical covariates.
A total of 213,678 participants were included, among whom 16.8% reported lifetime CLI. Mean SAI score was lower among those with lifetime CLI compared with those without (7.77, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 7.72-7.83 vs. 8.52, 95% CI: 8.50-8.55). There was a linear association between SAI quartile and predicted probability of lifetime CLI: first quartile: 23.9% (95% CI: 23.0-24.7); second quartile: 19.2% (95% CI: 18.6-19.8); third quartile: 17.5% (95% CI: 16.9-18.1); and fourth quartile: 12.5% (95% CI: 12.1-13.0).
The SAI score is associated in a reverse linear manner with lifetime risk of CLI, suggesting that to successfully improve health outcomes among those with CLI, interventions may need to target multiple SAI components simultaneously. Interventions that successfully position individuals to achieve higher social adaptability by targeting multiple factors may reduce the health-harming effects of exposure to the criminal legal system.
接触刑事司法系统与负面健康结果以及深刻的社会经济健康差异相关。社会适应能力指数(SAI)是一个基于社会经济地位五个指标的经过验证的综合量表;得分越高预示着健康结果越好。然而,对于通过SAI衡量的累积社会风险因素与终身刑事司法介入(CLI)之间的关系知之甚少。
我们使用了一个具有全国代表性的美国成年人横断面样本,根据终身CLI状态计算SAI得分,并使用带有预测边际的逻辑回归,通过SAI四分位数计算终身CLI风险,并对人口统计学和临床协变量进行调整。
总共纳入了213,678名参与者,其中16.8%报告有终身CLI。有终身CLI的人的平均SAI得分低于没有的人(7.77,95%置信区间[CI]:7.72 - 7.83对8.52,95%CI:8.50 - 8.55)。SAI四分位数与终身CLI的预测概率之间存在线性关联:第一四分位数:23.9%(95%CI:23.0 - 24.7);第二四分位数:19.2%(95%CI:18.6 - 19.8);第三四分位数:17.5%(95%CI:16.9 - 18.1);第四四分位数:12.5%(95%CI:12.1 - 13.0)。
SAI得分与CLI的终身风险呈反向线性关联,这表明为了成功改善CLI患者的健康结果,干预措施可能需要同时针对多个SAI组成部分。通过针对多个因素成功使个体实现更高社会适应能力的干预措施,可能会减少接触刑事司法系统对健康的有害影响。