Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and HIV Disparities in Correctional Settings: Practice and Policy Implications for African Americans
incarceration
Substance-Related Disorders
Disparities
HIV Infections
613
substance abuse
HIV/Aids
Humans
10. No inequality
African Americans
360
Research
Health Policy
Prisoners
05 social sciences
Health Status Disparities
16. Peace & justice
United States
3. Good health
Black or African American
Policy
Mental Health
corrections
Prisons
Public Health Practice
Public Health
Health disparities
0509 other social sciences
Illegal Drug Use
DOI:
10.1353/hpu.0.0154
Publication Date:
2009-05-10T13:00:12Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Mental health challenges, substance use disorders, and HIV/AIDS disproportionately affect Black people in correctional settings. Culturally responsive practice and equitable policy is predicated upon research that explores the burden, prevalence, and mortality of these public health concerns on the health and social well-being of African Americans in the correctional setting. This paper has three sections: (1) mental health; (2) substance abuse; and (3) HIV/AIDS. Each section summarizes current treatment issues unique to correctional settings, and provides recommendations for enhancing programs and policy to meet the needs of Black people who have been arrested, detained, incarcerated, paroled, or released. Further, we make recommendations for how interdisciplinary researchers and health care/treatment providers can engage in science-guided advocacy to address these issues and reduce related disparities experienced by people of African ancestry.
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