Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University, Durham, NC.
Milbank Q. 2022 Sep;100(3):722-760. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12569. Epub 2022 May 3.
Policy Points As a consequence of mass incarceration and related social inequities in the United States, jails annually incarcerate millions of people who have profound and expensive health care needs. Resources allocated for jail health care are scarce, likely resulting in treatment delays, limited access to care, lower-quality care, unnecessary use of emergency medical services (EMS) and emergency departments (EDs), and limited services to support continuity of care upon release. Potential policy solutions include alternative models for jail health care oversight and financing, and providing alternatives to incarceration, particularly for those with mental illness and substance use disorders.
Millions of people are incarcerated in US jails annually. These individuals commonly have ongoing medical needs, and most are released back to their communities within days or weeks. Jails are required to provide health care but have substantial discretion in how they provide care, and a thorough overview of jail health care is lacking. In response, we sought to generate a comprehensive description of jails' health care structures, resources, and delivery across the entire incarceration experience from jail entry to release.
We conducted in-depth interviews with jail personnel in five southeastern states from August 2018 to February 2019. We purposefully targeted recruitment from 34 jails reflecting a diversity of sizes, rurality, and locations, and we interviewed personnel most knowledgeable about health care delivery within each facility. We coded transcripts for salient themes and summarized content by and across participants. Domains included staffing, prebooking clearance, intake screening and care initiation, withdrawal management, history and physicals, sick calls, urgent care, external health care resources, and transitional care at release.
Ninety percent of jails contracted with private companies to provide health care. We identified two broad staffing models and four variations of the medical intake process. Detention officers often had medical duties, and jails routinely used community resources (e.g., emergency departments) to fill gaps in on-site care. Reentry transitional services were uncommon.
Jails' strategies for delivering health care were often influenced by a scarcity of on-site resources, particularly in the smaller facilities. Some strategies (e.g., officers performing medical duties) have not been well documented previously and raise immediate questions about safety and effectiveness, and broader questions about the adequacy of jail funding and impact of contracting with private health care companies. Beyond these findings, our description of jail health care newly provides researchers and policymakers a common foundation from which to understand and study the delivery of jail health care.
政策要点
由于美国大规模监禁和相关社会不平等,监狱每年监禁数百万有深刻和昂贵医疗需求的人。监狱医疗保健资源稀缺,可能导致治疗延误、护理机会有限、护理质量下降、不必要地使用紧急医疗服务(EMS)和急诊部门(EDs),以及释放后支持护理连续性的服务有限。潜在的政策解决方案包括监狱医疗保健监督和融资的替代模式,以及提供替代监禁的方法,特别是对于患有精神疾病和药物使用障碍的人。
每年有数百万人被监禁在美国监狱中。这些人通常有持续的医疗需求,其中大多数在几天或几周内被释放回社区。监狱被要求提供医疗保健,但在提供护理方面有很大的酌处权,而且对监狱医疗保健缺乏全面的概述。有鉴于此,我们试图从入狱到释放的整个监禁经历中,全面描述监狱的医疗保健结构、资源和服务。
我们于 2018 年 8 月至 2019 年 2 月在五个东南州对监狱人员进行了深入访谈。我们有目的地从 34 个监狱中招募人员,这些监狱的规模、农村程度和地点各不相同,我们采访了每个设施中最了解医疗保健服务的人员。我们对抄本进行了主题编码,并按参与者和参与者之间的内容进行了总结。领域包括人员配备、预登记清除、入院筛查和护理启动、戒断管理、病史和体检、病假、紧急护理、外部医疗资源以及释放时的过渡护理。
90%的监狱都与私营公司签订了提供医疗保健的合同。我们确定了两种广泛的人员配备模式和四种不同的医疗入院流程。拘留官员通常有医疗职责,监狱经常利用社区资源(例如,急诊部门)来填补现场护理的空白。重新进入过渡服务很少见。
监狱提供医疗保健的策略往往受到现场资源稀缺的影响,特别是在较小的设施中。一些策略(例如,官员执行医疗职责)以前没有得到很好的记录,这立即引发了关于安全性和有效性的问题,以及关于监狱资金充足性和与私营医疗保健公司签订合同的影响的更广泛问题。除了这些发现之外,我们对监狱医疗保健的描述还为研究人员和政策制定者提供了一个共同的基础,以便他们了解和研究监狱医疗保健的提供情况。