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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 2/2012

01-02-2012 | Original Research

Confined to Ignorance: The Absence of Prisoner Information from Nationally Representative Health Data Sets

Authors: Cyrus Ahalt, MA, Ingrid A. Binswanger, MD, MPH, Michael Steinman, MD, Jacqueline Tulsky, MD, Brie A. Williams, MD, MS

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 2/2012

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Abtract

BACKGROUND

Incarceration is associated with poor health and high costs. Given the dramatic growth in the criminal justice system’s population and associated expenses, inclusion of questions related to incarceration in national health data sets could provide essential data to researchers, clinicians and policy-makers.

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate a representative sample of publically available national health data sets for their ability to be used to study the health of currently or formerly incarcerated persons and to identify opportunities to improve criminal justice questions in health data sets.

DESIGN & APPROACH

We reviewed the 36 data sets from the Society of General Internal Medicine Dataset Compendium related to individual health. Through content analysis using incarceration-related keywords, we identified data sets that could be used to study currently or formerly incarcerated persons, and we identified opportunities to improve the availability of relevant data.

KEY RESULTS

While 12 (33%) data sets returned keyword matches, none could be used to study incarcerated persons. Three (8%) could be used to study the health of formerly incarcerated individuals, but only one data set included multiple questions such as length of incarceration and age at incarceration. Missed opportunities included: (1) data sets that included current prisoners but did not record their status (10, 28%); (2) data sets that asked questions related to incarceration but did not specifically record a subject’s status as formerly incarcerated (8, 22%); and (3) longitudinal studies that dropped and/or failed to record persons who became incarcerated during the study (8, 22%).

CONCLUSIONS

Few health data sets can be used to evaluate the association between incarceration and health. Three types of changes to existing national health data sets could substantially expand the available data, including: recording incarceration status for study participants who are incarcerated; recording subjects’ history of incarceration when this data is already being collected; and expanding incarceration-related questions in studies that already record incarceration history.
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Metadata
Title
Confined to Ignorance: The Absence of Prisoner Information from Nationally Representative Health Data Sets
Authors
Cyrus Ahalt, MA
Ingrid A. Binswanger, MD, MPH
Michael Steinman, MD
Jacqueline Tulsky, MD
Brie A. Williams, MD, MS
Publication date
01-02-2012
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 2/2012
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-011-1858-7

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