Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, and Wilson Center for Science & Justice, Duke University School of Law, Durham, NC, United States of America.
Duke Institute for Brain Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Oct 7;19(10):e0308798. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308798. eCollection 2024.
More than 7 million people are released each year from U.S. jails or prisons, many with chronic diseases that would benefit from primary care in their returning communities. The objective of this study was to provide an in-depth, payer-agnostic description and associational analysis of primary care need and utilization by all individuals ever detained in one county detention facility over a 7-year period. Detention records 2014-2020 were merged with data from an electronic health record with excellent coverage of local primary care, emergency, and hospital services. We found low primary care participation for the group as a whole, with under three quarters of those with serious chronic diseases ever seeing a primary care provider over a 7-year period and less than half ever having a year with more than one visit. Multivariable regression models estimated associations between individual characteristics (demographic, detention-related, and clinical) and ever having access to primary care (logistic) and the number of primary care visits (zero-inflated negative binomial). We found that having more jail bookings was associated with fewer primary care visits, but not one-time access, even controlling for time out of community, age, insurance, and other demographic characteristics. This finding was driven by subgroups with chronic disease such as hypertension, obstructive lung disease, and diabetes, who most need regular primary care. Being Black retained an independent effect, even controlling for bookings and other variables, and was also associated with fewer primary care visits, though not one-time access. To promote primary care utilization among individuals who have the combined challenges of repeated jail involvement and chronic disease, it is crucial to focus on engagement, as much as formal access. Access to health insurance alone will not resolve the problem; Medicaid expansion should be coupled with specialized, tailored support to promote engagement in primary care.
每年有超过 700 万人从美国监狱或监狱获释,其中许多人患有慢性病,在返回社区后需要接受初级保健。本研究的目的是对一个县拘留所 7 年内所有被拘留者的初级保健需求和利用情况进行深入的、不受支付方影响的描述和关联分析。2014 年至 2020 年的拘留记录与电子健康记录中的数据合并,该记录对当地初级保健、急诊和医院服务的覆盖率非常高。我们发现,整个群体的初级保健参与率很低,超过四分之三的严重慢性疾病患者在 7 年内从未见过初级保健提供者,不到一半的患者每年就诊次数超过一次。多变量回归模型估计了个体特征(人口统计学、拘留相关和临床)与是否能够获得初级保健(逻辑)和初级保健就诊次数(零膨胀负二项式)之间的关联。我们发现,被监禁的次数越多,接受初级保健的次数就越少,但即使控制了社区外时间、年龄、保险和其他人口统计学特征,也不会影响单次就诊机会。这一发现的驱动因素是患有慢性疾病(如高血压、阻塞性肺病和糖尿病)的亚组,他们最需要定期的初级保健。即使控制了预订和其他变量,黑人的身份仍然有独立的影响,也与较少的初级保健就诊次数有关,但与单次就诊机会无关。为了促进有反复入狱和慢性疾病双重挑战的个人利用初级保健,关注参与度至关重要,而不仅仅是正式获得途径。仅获得医疗保险并不能解决问题;应将医疗补助扩大与专门、定制的支持相结合,以促进参与初级保健。