Chapter authors identify the most compelling health problems behind bars (including communicable disease, mental illness, addiction, and suicide), pinpoint systemic barriers to care, and explain how correctional medicine can shift from emergency or crisis care to primary care and prevention. In addition, strategies are outlined that link community health resources to correctional facilities so that prisoners can transition to the community without unnecessarily taxing public resources or falling through the cracks. Between the authors' research findings and practical suggestions, readers will find realistic answers to these and similar questions:
- Can transmission of HIV, tuberculosis, and other communicable diseases be reduced and prevented among prisoners?
- How can correctional facilities treat addiction more effectively?
- What can be done to improve diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric disorders?
- Can correctional care benefit from quality management and performance measurement?
- How can care be coordinated between correctional and community health care providers?
- What are the health risks to communities if action is not taken?
Public Health Behind Bars:From Prisons to Communities is a challenge of immediate interest to readers in correctional health and medicine, public and community health, health care administration and policy, and civil rights.
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