Purpose: To increase knowledge of infectious diseases prevalent in prisons and increase intent to modify behaviors to regularly include transmission prevention strategies among inmates of a unit in a prison system in the southwestern United States. Background: The United States incarceration system holds nearly 2.5 million inmates. Infectious disease (ID) disproportionately affects the incarcerated. Their limited health literacy and education, oversaturated environments, risky substance dependence and sexual practices, sentence lengths, and release and recidivism rates are social determinants exacerbating the risk of ID contraction and transmission within incarcerated and surrounding communities. Health care costs associated with poor healt...
Mass incarceration is a sociostructural driver of profound health inequalities in the United States....
Purpose: Prisons offer a public health opportunity to access a group with multiple and complex needs...
Many researchers in social science and criminal justice fields have shown that reproductive health s...
The majority of prisoners are drawn from deprived circumstances with a range of health and social ne...
People in prison have multiple complex health and social care needs. These are likely to be the resu...
This paper recommends a minimum standard for program and evaluation plans to address HIV prevalence ...
At the end of 2005, ∼7 million people (or 1 of every 33 American adults) were either in jail, in pri...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
An estimated 15%–40 % of incarcerated persons in the United States are infected with hepatitis C vir...
The purpose of this project is to explore and better understand the management of HIV in the prison ...
From the first day of imprisonment, prisoners are exposed to and expose other prison...
Overcrowding can increase the risk of disease transmission, such as that of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), w...
Background: High rates of health inequalities and chronic non-communicable diseases exist amongst th...
Prisons are a risk environment in terms of presence of injecting drug use and infectious diseases. P...
Mass incarceration is a sociostructural driver of profound health inequalities in the United States....
Purpose: Prisons offer a public health opportunity to access a group with multiple and complex needs...
Many researchers in social science and criminal justice fields have shown that reproductive health s...
The majority of prisoners are drawn from deprived circumstances with a range of health and social ne...
People in prison have multiple complex health and social care needs. These are likely to be the resu...
This paper recommends a minimum standard for program and evaluation plans to address HIV prevalence ...
At the end of 2005, ∼7 million people (or 1 of every 33 American adults) were either in jail, in pri...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
An estimated 15%–40 % of incarcerated persons in the United States are infected with hepatitis C vir...
The purpose of this project is to explore and better understand the management of HIV in the prison ...
From the first day of imprisonment, prisoners are exposed to and expose other prison...
Overcrowding can increase the risk of disease transmission, such as that of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), w...
Background: High rates of health inequalities and chronic non-communicable diseases exist amongst th...
Prisons are a risk environment in terms of presence of injecting drug use and infectious diseases. P...
Mass incarceration is a sociostructural driver of profound health inequalities in the United States....
Purpose: Prisons offer a public health opportunity to access a group with multiple and complex needs...
Many researchers in social science and criminal justice fields have shown that reproductive health s...