College of Nursing, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.
The James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
JAMA Netw Open. 2023 Feb 1;6(2):e230803. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.0803.
The US leads the world in the raw number of incarcerated persons as well as the rate of incarceration, with detrimental effects on individual-, family-, community-, and population-level health; as such, federal research has a critical role in documenting and addressing the health-related impacts of the US criminal legal system. How often incarceration-related research is funded at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Science Foundation (NSF), and US Department of Justice (DOJ) levels has a direct association with the public attention given to mass incarceration as well as the efficacy of strategies to mitigate negative effects and poor health related to incarceration.
To understand how many incarceration-related projects have been funded at the NIH, NSF, and DOJ.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study used public historical project archives to search for relevant incarceration-related keywords (eg, incarceration, prison, parole) since January 1, 1985 (NIH and NSF), and since January 1, 2008 (DOJ). Quotations and Boolean operator logic were used. All searches and counts were conducted and double verified by 2 coauthors between December 12 and 17, 2022.
Number and prevalence of funded projects related to incarceration and prison keywords.
The term incarceration resulted in 3540 of 3 234 159 total project awards (0.11%) and prisoner-related terms resulted in 11 455 total project awards (0.35%) across the 3 federal agencies since 1985. Nearly a tenth of all projects funded at NIH since 1985 related to education (256 584 [9.62%]) compared with only 3373 projects (0.13%) that related to criminal legal or criminal justice or correctional system and 18 projects (0.0007%) that related to incarcerated parents. Only 1857 (0.07%) of all NIH-funded projects have been funded related to racism since 1985.
This cross-sectional study found that a very low number of projects about incarceration have historically been funded at the NIH, DOJ, and NSF. These findings reflect a dearth of federally funded studies investigating the effects of mass incarceration or intervention strategies to mitigate adverse effects. Given the consequences of the criminal legal system, it is undoubtedly time for researchers, and our nation, to invest more resources into studying whether this system should be maintained, the intergenerational effects of mass incarceration, and strategies to best mitigate its impact on public health.
美国在被监禁人数和监禁率方面均居世界首位,这对个人、家庭、社区和人口健康都产生了不利影响;因此,联邦研究在记录和解决与美国刑事司法系统相关的健康影响方面发挥着至关重要的作用。美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)、美国国家科学基金会(NSF)和美国司法部(DOJ)资助与监禁相关的研究的频率与公众对大规模监禁的关注以及减轻监禁相关负面影响和不良健康后果的策略的有效性直接相关。
了解 NIH、NSF 和 DOJ 资助了多少与监禁相关的项目。
设计、设置和参与者:本横断面研究使用公共历史项目档案,自 1985 年 1 月 1 日(NIH 和 NSF)和 2008 年 1 月 1 日(DOJ)以来,搜索与监禁相关的关键词(例如,监禁、监狱、假释)。使用引号和布尔运算符逻辑。2022 年 12 月 12 日至 17 日,由两位合著者进行并双重验证了所有搜索和计数。
自 1985 年以来,与监禁和囚犯关键词相关的受资助项目的数量和流行率。
自 1985 年以来,在这 3 个联邦机构中,监禁一词导致了 3234159 个总项目奖励中的 3540 个(0.11%),而囚犯相关术语导致了 11455 个总项目奖励(0.35%)。自 1985 年以来,NIH 资助的项目中近十分之一与教育有关(256584 [9.62%]),而仅 3373 个项目(0.13%)与刑事法律或刑事司法或惩教系统有关,只有 18 个项目(0.0007%)与监禁父母有关。自 1985 年以来,NIH 资助的项目中只有 1857 个(0.07%)与种族主义有关。
这项横断面研究发现,历史上 NIH、DOJ 和 NSF 资助的与监禁相关的项目数量非常少。这些发现反映出缺乏联邦资助的研究来调查大规模监禁的影响或减轻不利影响的干预策略。鉴于刑事司法系统的后果,无疑是时候让研究人员和我们的国家投入更多资源来研究这个系统是否应该保留、大规模监禁的代际影响以及减轻其对公共卫生影响的最佳策略了。