The ageing prisoner population: demographic shifts in Australia and implications for the economic and social costs of health care.

IF 1.1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Natasha Ann Ginnivan, Rafal Chomik, Ye In Jane Hwang, John Piggott, Tony Butler, Adrienne Withall
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Abstract

Purpose: The Australian prisoner population has experienced a dramatic increase in the number of older inmates over the past decade, consistent with the greying of the prisoner population that is being observed worldwide. Reviews suggest the need for further evidence and practice outside of the USA. This paper aims to review and discuss the cost and social implications of the rising health-care needs of this population in Australia.

Design/methodology/approach: A review of international research and policies is presented, as well as the results of basic economic modelling relating to the expected rise in health-care costs of the ageing prisoner population in Australia.

Findings: Taking into consideration the continued rise in incarceration rates, the calculations show that the health costs of prisoners could increase by anywhere between 17% and 90% depending on whether the increase of older prisoners continues as it has in the past decade. These trends are likely to continue over the next decade and will result in higher health costs of prisons under a number of different imprisonment scenarios. Policy responses in Australia have been slow so far, with most initiatives being undertaken in the USA with promising results.

Practical implications: The authors suggest that in the absence of a coordinated policy response, covering a range of interventions, costs will continue to increase, particularly as this population continues to age more rapidly than the general population due to an accumulation of risk factors. Well-conceived interventions would be a worthwhile investment from both financial and social perspectives.

Originality/value: To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first commentary to acknowledge this rising public health issue and to both review and model its implications for the future.

囚犯人口老龄化:澳大利亚的人口变化及其对医疗保健的经济和社会成本的影响
目的澳大利亚囚犯人数在过去十年中经历了老年囚犯人数的急剧增加,这与世界各地囚犯人数的老龄化相一致。综述表明,需要进一步的证据和美国以外的实践。本文旨在回顾和讨论澳大利亚这一人群日益增长的医疗保健需求的成本和社会影响。设计/方法/方法对国际研究和政策进行了综述,以及与澳大利亚老龄囚犯人口的医疗保健费用预期上升有关的基本经济模型的结果。考虑到监禁率的持续上升,计算表明,囚犯的健康成本可能会增加17%至90%,这取决于年长囚犯的增长是否像过去十年那样持续。这些趋势可能会在未来十年继续下去,并将导致在多种不同监禁情况下监狱的医疗费用增加。到目前为止,澳大利亚的政策反应缓慢,美国正在采取大多数举措,取得了可喜的成果。实际含义作者认为,在缺乏涵盖一系列干预措施的协调政策应对措施的情况下,成本将继续增加,特别是由于风险因素的积累,这一人群的老龄化速度继续高于普通人群。从金融和社会两个角度来看,构思周密的干预措施都是值得的投资。原创性/价值据作者所知,这是第一篇承认这一日益严重的公共卫生问题并对其未来影响进行审查和建模的评论。
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
International Journal of Prisoner Health
International Journal of Prisoner Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
21.40%
发文量
56
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