Access to and predictors of substance use treatment and support among people experiencing incarceration in the United States: Analysis of a national cross-sectional study

IF 2.9
Samuel J. Chen , Harold A. Pollack , Elizabeth M. Salisbury-Afshar , Mai T. Pho
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Abstract

Substance use-related overdose continues to be one of the leading causes of preventable death in the U.S. People returning from prisons and jails are at heightened risk. Certain substance use treatment methods in carceral facilities – especially medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) – have shown promise in reducing overdose rates. Treatment availability has been under-studied, with past research often measuring whether facilities offer treatment, but not whether individuals actually receive it. This study used individual-level data to characterize who qualifies for prison-based treatment, who receives it, and what factors affect one’s likelihood of being treated, drawing from the most recent nationally-representative U.S. Survey of Prison Inmates. Descriptive statistics indicate that people with substance use disorder (SUD) who entered American prisons from 2014 to 2016 had lower levels of educational attainment, employment and housing, and higher levels of physical and mental illness. Just 13 % of individuals with SUD received any form of substance use treatment in prison; pharmacotherapies like methadone were almost nonexistent (<1 %). In controlled analysis, individuals who self-identified as Non-Hispanic Black or Hispanic had lower odds of receiving any treatment or support compared to Non-Hispanic White individuals. People convicted of a violent offense had lower odds of treatment than those convicted of other classes of crimes. These novel findings indicate that, in 2016, America’s prison-based substance use treatment had both poor accessibility and inequitable distribution. This raises concerns that, even as facility-level availability of modalities like MOUD continues to expand, certain groups may be left out without attention to individual-level availability.
在美国经历监禁的人中获得药物使用治疗和支持的途径和预测因素:一项全国性横断面研究的分析
在美国,与药物使用有关的过量使用仍然是导致可预防死亡的主要原因之一。从监狱和拘留所返回的人面临着更高的风险。在监狱设施中,某些物质使用治疗方法——特别是针对阿片类药物使用障碍(mod)的药物治疗——在降低过量吸毒率方面显示出了希望。治疗的可用性一直没有得到充分的研究,过去的研究通常衡量的是设施是否提供治疗,而不是个人是否真正接受治疗。这项研究使用了个人层面的数据来描述谁有资格接受监狱治疗,谁接受了治疗,以及哪些因素影响了一个人接受治疗的可能性,这些数据来自最近具有全国代表性的美国监狱囚犯调查。描述性统计数据显示,2014年至2016年进入美国监狱的物质使用障碍(SUD)患者的受教育程度、就业和住房水平较低,身体和精神疾病水平较高。只有13%的SUD患者在监狱中接受过任何形式的药物使用治疗;美沙酮等药物治疗几乎不存在(1%)。在对照分析中,与非西班牙裔白人相比,自我认定为非西班牙裔黑人或西班牙裔的人接受任何治疗或支持的几率更低。被判暴力犯罪的人比被判其他类型犯罪的人得到治疗的几率更低。这些新发现表明,2016年美国基于监狱的药物使用治疗可及性差,分配不公平。这引起了人们的关注,即使像mod这样的设施级别的可用性继续扩大,某些群体可能会在没有关注个人级别可用性的情况下被排除在外。
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来源期刊
Drug and alcohol dependence reports
Drug and alcohol dependence reports Psychiatry and Mental Health
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