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Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, School of Medicine Co-director of HIV services, North Carolina Dept of Corrections
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Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Jan 11, 2016

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Page 1: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities

June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH

Assistant Professor of MedicineUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, School of MedicineCo-director of HIV services, North Carolina Dept of Corrections

Page 2: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Correctional Health Care

• Guaranteed by the Constitution

• Not Primary Goal of Corrections

• Understaffed

• Overburdened-too many inmates

• Underfunded –(e.g. Jails)

Page 3: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Cycle of Incarceration and Release and Relation to Health care

Adapted from Zaller et al, Medscape 2009

Page 4: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Community to Jail :Barriers to Entry into Care

• Inmate-(disclosure issues, poor trust in correctional health care system)

• Staffing- Understaffed, High turn over

• Policy –HIV screening/testing policies

Page 5: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Jail :Barriers to Continuity of Care• Inmate-disclosure issues, poor trust in correctional health care

system, high inmate turn over, 50% released in less than 72 hours

• Staffing- Understaffed, High turn over, lack of HIV-related knowledge

• Policy – Medicare, Medicaid, ADAP, VA, Private discontinued or suspended, correctional health care system based on “sick-call” model of care

• Logistical-Geographically away from HIV care sites

• Financial-No funds for HAART (e. g. see Policy barriers)

Page 6: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Prison: Barriers to Entry into Care

• Inmate-disclosure issues, poor trust in correctional health care system

• Staffing- Understaffed, lack of HIV-related knowledge

• Policy – HIV testing policy

Page 7: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Prison : Barriers to Continuity of Care

• Inmates-adherence issues

• Staffing- lack of knowledge of HAART, high turn over

• Logistical-inmates often move from prison to prison having to re-establish relationships with nurses, providers, and individual prison system

Page 8: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Prison: Facilitators to Continuity of Care

• Staffing- HIV nurse case-managers, HIV specialist (Academic, Public Health, Private, Correctional Staff), HIV pharmacists

• Policies-treat per guideline recomm

• Financial-Access to HAART often better than community

Page 9: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

9

NC Department of Correction (NC DOC) Prisons

#

#

##

# #

##

Admission / Intake prison

Non-admission prison

Courtesy of D. Rosen

Page 10: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Prison and Jail :Barriers to Continuity of Care at Release

• Inmate- Health care not a priority, homeless, mental health issues, substance abuse issues, poor trust in health care system, resume old habits, return to same community

• Providers/Case-managers-lack of knowledge about substance abuse, overburdened by clients issues

• Policy – Need to re-access Medicare, Medicaid, ADAP, Private, gaps in coverage result

• Logistical-Geographically away from HIV care sites, No Transportation

• Financial-ADAP waiting lists

Page 11: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

1111

Viral Load Increases Among Recidivists

HIV

-1 R

NA

(cop

ies/

ml)

Recidivists

100

1000

10000

100000

1000000Pre-release

Reincarceration

Stephenson (White et al, Public Health Reports)

Page 12: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

NC BRIGHT: Study Schema

• Primary Outcome: Access to routine medical care post-release• Week 4: 64% BCM vs 54% Standard of care, p value 0.3• NO DIFFERENCE• Courtesy of David Wohl

BRIDGING CASE

MGMT (BCM)INTAKE

Randomize

Evaluations:<3m prior to release Release +14d +2m +6m +9m +12m

NCDOC Discharge Planning(SOC)

Page 13: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Continuity of Care after Release: 30 days

• Texas (Prison)-17% (JAMA 2009)

• NC (Prison)-50-60% in care (NC, Bright )

• Rhode Island (Prison)->90% (Project Bridge, Rhode Island)

• Mass- (Jail), 84-90% (Hampden County-Community Integrated Correctional Health Model

Page 14: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Prison and Jail : Facilitators to Continuity of Care at Release

• Collaboration between the community and correctional facilities

Page 15: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Cycle of Incarceration and Release and Relation to Health care

Adapted from Zaller et al, Medscape 2009

Page 16: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

“ Prison Health is Public Health”

WHO 2005

Page 17: Barriers to Entry and Continuity of care in Correctional Facilities June 21, 2010 Becky L. White MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Medicine University of.

Thanks• UNC CFAR Criminal Justice Working Group (Golin,

Fogel, Wohl etc)

• Anne Spaulding , Emory University

• David Rosen, UNC, Sheps Center

• Nichole Kiziah, Gilead Pharmaceuticals

• Linda Cross, NCDOC