Access to Surgery and Health Care for Justice-Involved Individuals.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q3 SURGERY
American Surgeon Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-04-21 DOI:10.1177/00031348251318382
D Fletcher, K Morgan, K Miller-Hammond, S Johnson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Justice-involved individuals, encompassing those with prior interactions with the correctional system, represent a population with significant unmet healthcare needs. Approximately 95% of incarcerated individuals return to society, often with unresolved chronic conditions or infectious diseases such as HIV and Hepatitis C, and face considerable barriers to accessing healthcare. Institutional constraints, logistical complications, inadequate resources, and cultural biases exacerbate disparities, contributing to suboptimal health outcomes and public health risks. Healthcare access for justice-involved individuals is hindered by multiple factors, including limited availability of medications like opioid use disorder treatments, restricted surgical and preventive care, and systemic challenges in initiating healthcare. The suspension of Medicaid during incarceration, compounded by high uninsurance rates post-release, further exacerbates these inequities. Despite legislative efforts such as the Affordable Care Act and state-level policies addressing restraint use, healthcare services for this population remain inadequate and inconsistent. Recommendations include leveraging correctional facilities to enhance healthcare delivery, incorporating justice-involved populations in hospital design and planning, and fostering collaborations between correctional facilities and healthcare organizations. Training healthcare professionals in correctional medicine and tailoring care programs to justice-involved patients' needs are critical. Research should focus on improving care models, expanding insurance enrollment initiatives, and addressing long-term health outcomes for this vulnerable group. Efforts to integrate justice-involved individuals into broader healthcare frameworks can reduce health disparities, improve public health, and promote equitable access to care. Addressing these systemic issues requires collaborative approaches across healthcare, correctional, and policy sectors.

参与司法的个人获得手术和保健的机会。
与司法有关的个人,包括那些先前与惩教系统有过互动的人,代表了一个有重大未满足医疗保健需求的人群。大约95%的被监禁者重返社会,往往患有未解决的慢性病或艾滋病毒和丙型肝炎等传染病,并且在获得医疗保健方面面临相当大的障碍。体制限制、后勤问题、资源不足和文化偏见加剧了差距,导致健康结果欠佳和公共卫生风险。涉及司法的个人获得医疗保健受到多种因素的阻碍,包括阿片类药物使用障碍治疗等药物的可用性有限,手术和预防性护理受限,以及启动医疗保健方面的系统性挑战。在监禁期间暂停医疗补助,再加上释放后的高无保险率,进一步加剧了这些不平等。尽管《平价医疗法案》(Affordable Care Act)和州级政策等立法努力解决了限制使用的问题,但针对这一人群的医疗保健服务仍然不足且不一致。建议包括利用惩教设施来加强医疗保健服务,将涉及司法的人群纳入医院设计和规划,以及促进惩教设施和医疗保健组织之间的合作。对医疗保健专业人员进行矫正医学培训,并根据涉及司法的患者的需要量身定制护理方案,这一点至关重要。研究应侧重于改善护理模式,扩大保险登记计划,并解决这一弱势群体的长期健康结果。努力将与司法有关的个人纳入更广泛的卫生保健框架,可以减少卫生差距,改善公共卫生,促进公平获得保健。解决这些系统性问题需要医疗保健、惩教和政策部门之间的协作方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
American Surgeon
American Surgeon 医学-外科
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
623
期刊介绍: The American Surgeon is a monthly peer-reviewed publication published by the Southeastern Surgical Congress. Its area of concentration is clinical general surgery, as defined by the content areas of the American Board of Surgery: alimentary tract (including bariatric surgery), abdomen and its contents, breast, skin and soft tissue, endocrine system, solid organ transplantation, pediatric surgery, surgical critical care, surgical oncology (including head and neck surgery), trauma and emergency surgery, and vascular surgery.
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