U.S. prisons have a court-affirmed mandate to provide health care to prisoners. Given this mandate, we sought to determine whether use of prison health care was equitable across race using a nationally-representative sample of Black and White male state prisoners. We first examined the prevalence of health conditions by race. Then, across all health conditions and for each of 15 conditions, we compared the proportion of Black and White male prisoners with the condition who received health care. For most conditions including cancer, heart disease, and liver-related disorders, the age-adjusted prevalence of disease among Blacks was lower than among Whites (
Given the current United States prison population of 1.5 million persons, many states have begun to ...
Prisoners have higher rates of chronic diseases such as substance dependence, mental health conditio...
BACKGROUND: The size and mean age of the prison population has increased rapidly in recent years. Pr...
U.S. prisons have a court-affirmed mandate to provide health care to prisoners. Given this mandate, ...
This paper compares black-white health disparities among prisoners to disparities in the noninstitut...
This paper compares black-white health disparities among prisoners to disparities in the noninstitut...
We compared mortality rates among state prisoners and other state residents to identify prisoners’ h...
Approximately 87% of the inmate population in the United States is male and with thousands of them b...
Prisoners have higher rates of chronic diseases such as substance dependence, mental health conditio...
The inmate population is increasing, aging and generally in poorer health than the non-incarcerated ...
This study investigates the prisoner and prison-level factors associated with healthcare utilization...
The social, economic, and health consequences of incarceration can no longer be ignored. The dispari...
This study was part of a continuing effort to define the health profile of a city-county workhouse i...
Objectives. We compared mortality of ex-prisoners and other state residents to identify unmet health...
Medicaid is an important source of health care coverage for prison-involved populations. From 2011 t...
Given the current United States prison population of 1.5 million persons, many states have begun to ...
Prisoners have higher rates of chronic diseases such as substance dependence, mental health conditio...
BACKGROUND: The size and mean age of the prison population has increased rapidly in recent years. Pr...
U.S. prisons have a court-affirmed mandate to provide health care to prisoners. Given this mandate, ...
This paper compares black-white health disparities among prisoners to disparities in the noninstitut...
This paper compares black-white health disparities among prisoners to disparities in the noninstitut...
We compared mortality rates among state prisoners and other state residents to identify prisoners’ h...
Approximately 87% of the inmate population in the United States is male and with thousands of them b...
Prisoners have higher rates of chronic diseases such as substance dependence, mental health conditio...
The inmate population is increasing, aging and generally in poorer health than the non-incarcerated ...
This study investigates the prisoner and prison-level factors associated with healthcare utilization...
The social, economic, and health consequences of incarceration can no longer be ignored. The dispari...
This study was part of a continuing effort to define the health profile of a city-county workhouse i...
Objectives. We compared mortality of ex-prisoners and other state residents to identify unmet health...
Medicaid is an important source of health care coverage for prison-involved populations. From 2011 t...
Given the current United States prison population of 1.5 million persons, many states have begun to ...
Prisoners have higher rates of chronic diseases such as substance dependence, mental health conditio...
BACKGROUND: The size and mean age of the prison population has increased rapidly in recent years. Pr...