Coffey Vickii, Shah Zainab, Jenkins Esther, Spencer Shirley, Muse Mary, Rodgers Carolyn, Strickland Joseph, Morse Diane
Department of Social Work, College of Health and Human Services, Governors State University, University Park, IL, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, NY, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2025 Jan 6. doi: 10.1007/s11606-024-09276-7.
Prior research has shown that African American men and women are more likely to receive lower quality healthcare compared to their white counterparts, which is exacerbated in jail and prison healthcare systems.
The purpose of this study is to explore barriers and facilitators to quality healthcare among African American men and women released from Illinois State Prisons or Cook County Jail by examining their opinions and experiences with overall healthcare and cancer screening during and after incarceration.
Four focus groups (n = 25 "co-researchers") were conducted to understand how formerly incarcerated African American men and women perceive and describe their experience of accessing, understanding, and utilizing healthcare during and after incarceration. Co-researchers' reports on healthcare during incarceration are retrospective.
Multiple facilitators and barriers to accessing healthcare were described. Unique themes from during incarceration included lack of access to adequate and appropriate healthcare, lack of trustworthiness of healthcare systems, excessive and punitive co-pays for questionable and inadequate healthcare, responses to inappropriate or inadequate healthcare motivated by negative attitudes, and actions by correctional staff or healthcare professionals which dis-incentivized medical help-seeking, and gaps in knowledge and understanding about cancer screening and chronic health conditions. Post-release themes included strong motivations to access and routinely utilize healthcare systems, the ability to prioritize health, increased access to healthcare and healthcare systems (though this required structural assistance), good or better-quality healthcare, and on-going support, knowledge, and positive interactions with healthcare professionals.
This study highlights the need to address barriers to accessing healthcare during and after incarceration, particularly given racial disparities in healthcare treatment and outcomes.
先前的研究表明,与白人相比,非裔美国男性和女性获得的医疗保健质量较低,而在监狱医疗系统中这种情况更为严重。
本研究的目的是通过调查伊利诺伊州监狱或库克县监狱释放的非裔美国男性和女性对监禁期间及之后整体医疗保健和癌症筛查的看法及经历,探讨他们获得高质量医疗保健的障碍和促进因素。
开展了四个焦点小组(共25名“共同研究者”),以了解曾被监禁的非裔美国男性和女性如何看待和描述他们在监禁期间及之后获得、理解和利用医疗保健的经历。共同研究者关于监禁期间医疗保健的报告是回顾性的。
描述了获得医疗保健的多个促进因素和障碍。监禁期间的独特主题包括:无法获得充分和适当的医疗保健、医疗保健系统缺乏可信度、对有问题和不充分的医疗保健收取过高且惩罚性的共付费用、因负面态度而对不适当或不充分的医疗保健做出的反应、惩教人员或医疗保健专业人员的行为抑制了寻求医疗帮助的积极性,以及在癌症筛查和慢性健康状况方面的知识和理解差距。释放后的主题包括:获得和定期利用医疗保健系统的强烈动机、能够优先考虑健康、增加了获得医疗保健和医疗保健系统的机会(尽管这需要结构性援助)、良好或更高质量的医疗保健,以及与医疗保健专业人员持续的支持、知识和积极互动。
本研究强调需要消除监禁期间及之后获得医疗保健的障碍,特别是考虑到医疗保健治疗和结果方面的种族差异。