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Prison Health and Public Health Responses at a Regional Prison in Western Australia

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Public Health
Date 2008 Dec 17
PMID 19076747
Citations 7
Authors
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Abstract

Objective: To describe the health of inmates in a Western Australian regional prison and evaluate the coverage of public health interventions.

Design: Cross-sectional audit of all paper-based and electronic medical notes of inmates at one regional prison in Western Australia.

Setting: A mixed medium-security prison in regional Western Australia.

Participants: 185 prisoners, 170 men and 15 women.

Main Results: The prisoners were mainly young (70% < 35 years of age) and Indigenous (84%). Fifty two percent of prisoners had at least one chronic health condition. There was a significantly higher prevalence of diabetes to that found in the general Indigenous population (15% vs 6% p=0.001), and a significantly lower prevalence hepatitis C (4.5%) compared with both national (29-61%) and State (20%) data. Screening for sexually transmitted infections and blood borne viruses within the first month of incarceration was achieved for 43% of inmates. Vaccination coverage for influenza (36%) and pneumococcal disease (12%) was low.

Conclusion: This study makes visible the burden of disease and reach of public health interventions within a largely Indigenous regional prisoner population. Our study demonstrates that the additional risks associated with being Indigenous remain in a regional Australian prison but also shows that interventions can be delivered equitably to Indigenous and non-Indigenous inmates.

Implications: Ongoing monitoring of prisoner health is critical to take advantage of opportunities to improve public health interventions with timely STI and BBV screening and increased vaccinations rates.

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Vaccination Coverage among Prisoners: A Systematic Review.

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Aldridge R, Story A, Hwang S, Nordentoft M, Luchenski S, Hartwell G Lancet. 2017; 391(10117):241-250.

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Graham S, Harrod M, Iversen J, Hocking J Hepat Mon. 2016; 16(7):e38640.

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