Cargando…

The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia

People who inject drugs (PWID) are disproportionately represented among individuals who experience imprisonment and often have more complex physical and mental health needs than people in prison without injecting histories. The trajectories of PWID after prison release are poorly understood, hamperi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kirwan, Amy, Curtis, Michael, Dietze, Paul, Aitken, Campbell, Woods, Emma, Walker, Shelley, Kinner, Stuart, Ogloff, James, Butler, Tony, Stoové, Mark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6565648/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30989484
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-019-00353-5
_version_ 1783426689908342784
author Kirwan, Amy
Curtis, Michael
Dietze, Paul
Aitken, Campbell
Woods, Emma
Walker, Shelley
Kinner, Stuart
Ogloff, James
Butler, Tony
Stoové, Mark
author_facet Kirwan, Amy
Curtis, Michael
Dietze, Paul
Aitken, Campbell
Woods, Emma
Walker, Shelley
Kinner, Stuart
Ogloff, James
Butler, Tony
Stoové, Mark
author_sort Kirwan, Amy
collection PubMed
description People who inject drugs (PWID) are disproportionately represented among individuals who experience imprisonment and often have more complex physical and mental health needs than people in prison without injecting histories. The trajectories of PWID after prison release are poorly understood, hampering the development of effective strategies to address their distinct health needs. The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study is characterising the post-release trajectories of incarcerated male PWID in Victoria, Australia. We outline study methodology and baseline characteristics of participants prior to their release. Four hundred participants were recruited from three prisons and completed researcher-administered baseline interviews covering socio-demographics, social supports, physical health, mental health, alcohol and other drug use, and pre-release and transitional service utilisation. The median age among participants was 36 years (IQR 30–42), and they reported a median of five (IQR 3–9) previous adult incarcerations. Almost half (49%) were reliant on government payments prior to incarceration. One quarter (25%) of participants reported removal from their parents’ care as children and 64% reported being a parent or primary caregiver to children. Most participants (81%) reported a previous mental health diagnosis and 44% reported three or more diagnoses. The most common drugs injected prior to incarceration were crystal methamphetamine (80%) and heroin (62%), and most (85%) reported being under the influence of drugs at the time of committing offences for which they were currently incarcerated. Injecting drug use during their current sentence was reported by 40% of participants, and 48% reported engaging with some form of drug treatment during their current sentence. Study participants are characterised by significant mental health and substance use morbidities, social disadvantage and criminogenic histories that present challenges for the provision of post-release support services. Data from the PATH Cohort Study will help inform strategies to improve the health and social outcomes of this population.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6565648
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Springer US
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-65656482019-06-28 The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia Kirwan, Amy Curtis, Michael Dietze, Paul Aitken, Campbell Woods, Emma Walker, Shelley Kinner, Stuart Ogloff, James Butler, Tony Stoové, Mark J Urban Health Article People who inject drugs (PWID) are disproportionately represented among individuals who experience imprisonment and often have more complex physical and mental health needs than people in prison without injecting histories. The trajectories of PWID after prison release are poorly understood, hampering the development of effective strategies to address their distinct health needs. The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study is characterising the post-release trajectories of incarcerated male PWID in Victoria, Australia. We outline study methodology and baseline characteristics of participants prior to their release. Four hundred participants were recruited from three prisons and completed researcher-administered baseline interviews covering socio-demographics, social supports, physical health, mental health, alcohol and other drug use, and pre-release and transitional service utilisation. The median age among participants was 36 years (IQR 30–42), and they reported a median of five (IQR 3–9) previous adult incarcerations. Almost half (49%) were reliant on government payments prior to incarceration. One quarter (25%) of participants reported removal from their parents’ care as children and 64% reported being a parent or primary caregiver to children. Most participants (81%) reported a previous mental health diagnosis and 44% reported three or more diagnoses. The most common drugs injected prior to incarceration were crystal methamphetamine (80%) and heroin (62%), and most (85%) reported being under the influence of drugs at the time of committing offences for which they were currently incarcerated. Injecting drug use during their current sentence was reported by 40% of participants, and 48% reported engaging with some form of drug treatment during their current sentence. Study participants are characterised by significant mental health and substance use morbidities, social disadvantage and criminogenic histories that present challenges for the provision of post-release support services. Data from the PATH Cohort Study will help inform strategies to improve the health and social outcomes of this population. Springer US 2019-04-15 2019-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6565648/ /pubmed/30989484 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-019-00353-5 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Article
Kirwan, Amy
Curtis, Michael
Dietze, Paul
Aitken, Campbell
Woods, Emma
Walker, Shelley
Kinner, Stuart
Ogloff, James
Butler, Tony
Stoové, Mark
The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia
title The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia
title_full The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia
title_fullStr The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia
title_full_unstemmed The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia
title_short The Prison and Transition Health (PATH) Cohort Study: Study Protocol and Baseline Characteristics of a Cohort of Men with a History of Injecting Drug Use Leaving Prison in Australia
title_sort prison and transition health (path) cohort study: study protocol and baseline characteristics of a cohort of men with a history of injecting drug use leaving prison in australia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6565648/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30989484
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-019-00353-5
work_keys_str_mv AT kirwanamy theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT curtismichael theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT dietzepaul theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT aitkencampbell theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT woodsemma theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT walkershelley theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT kinnerstuart theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT ogloffjames theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT butlertony theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT stoovemark theprisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT kirwanamy prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT curtismichael prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT dietzepaul prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT aitkencampbell prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT woodsemma prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT walkershelley prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT kinnerstuart prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT ogloffjames prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT butlertony prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia
AT stoovemark prisonandtransitionhealthpathcohortstudystudyprotocolandbaselinecharacteristicsofacohortofmenwithahistoryofinjectingdruguseleavingprisoninaustralia