Literature DB >> 18843839

Disrupted lives, fragmented care: illness experiences of criminalized women.

Susan Sered1, Maureen Norton-Hawk.   

Abstract

Thirty-three women recently released from a Massachusetts correctional facility were included in a qualitative study, carried out between January and July 2007, in which semi-structured, open-ended, individual interviews were conducted. The women described lives repeatedly disrupted, typically by sexual and physical violence, and then again by homelessness, joblessness, bad relationships, loss of their children, legal troubles, fractured physical and mental health, and fragmented medical attention by a large, disjointed variety of providers and facilities. This article argues that rather than repairing life disruptions, the women's fragmented health care histories tended to echo or even become part of that fragmentation. We suggest that criminalization and medicalization actually served as two sides of the same coin in the women's life experiences.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18843839     DOI: 10.1080/03630240802131999

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Women Health        ISSN: 0363-0242


  4 in total

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Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2014-07-11       Impact factor: 1.352

2.  Social Factors Related to the Utilization of Health Care Among Prison Inmates.

Authors:  Kathryn M Nowotny
Journal:  J Correct Health Care       Date:  2016-04

3.  Impact of family-friendly prison policies on health, justice and child protection outcomes for incarcerated mothers and their dependent children: a cohort study protocol.

Authors:  Helen Myers; Leonie Segal; Derrick Lopez; Ian W Li; David B Preen
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Health care needs and service use among male prison inmates in the United States: A multi-level behavioral model of prison health service utilization.

Authors:  Kathryn M Nowotny
Journal:  Health Justice       Date:  2017-06-08
  4 in total

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