| Literature DB >> 30782211 |
Adam Chamberlain1, Sylviah Nyamu2, Jenerius Aminawung3, Emily A Wang3, Shira Shavit4, Aaron D Fox5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: More than 80% of people in jail or prison report having used illicit substances in their lifetimes. After release from incarceration, resumption of substance use carries risks, including parole revocation, exacerbation of mental health conditions, transmission of infectious diseases, and drug overdose.Entities:
Keywords: Illicit substance use; Incarceration; Primary care; Transitions Clinics
Year: 2019 PMID: 30782211 PMCID: PMC6381679 DOI: 10.1186/s13722-019-0136-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract ISSN: 1940-0632
Demographic and clinical characteristics of 751 participants who received medical care following release from prison
| Demographic characteristic | Reported any substance use since release (%) | Did not report any substance use since release (%) | Total n (%) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, median (IQ range) | 45 (35–51) | 48 (39–54) | 47 (38–53) |
|
| Male | 123 (92) | 517 (84) | 640 (85) |
|
| Race/ethnicity | ||||
| Hispanic | 36 (27) | 191 (31) | 227 (30) | NS |
| Non-Hispanic black | 72 (54) | 280 (45) | 352 (47) | 0.08 |
| Non-Hispanic white | 19 (14) | 115 (19) | 134 (18) | NS |
| Other | 7 (5) | 31 (5) | 38 (5) | NS |
| Graduated high school | 50 (38) | 255 (42) | 305 (41) | NS |
| Receive employment earnings | 7 (5) | 54 (9) | 61 (8) | NS |
| Receive any income | 61 (46) | 316 (51) | 377 (50) | NS |
| Housing | ||||
| Unstable | 44 (33) | 148 (24) | 192 (26) |
|
| Institutional | 25 (19) | 266 (42) | 291 (39) |
|
| “Doubling up” | 58 (43) | 152 (25) | 210 (28) |
|
| Rent/own | 7 (5) | 50 (8) | 57 (7) | NS |
| Years incarcerated during latest prison term, median (IQ) | 2 (1–4) | 4 (2–9) | 4 (2–8) |
|
| Weeks to TCN engagement, median (IQ) | 7 (3–14) | 4 (2–9) | 5 (2–9) |
|
| Current parole | 95 (72) | 501 (82) | 596 (80) |
|
| Reported diagnoses | ||||
| Depression (N = 683) | 71 (59) | 240 (43) | 311 (46) |
|
| Bipolar (N = 677) | 42 (36) | 141 (25) | 183 (27) |
|
| PTSD (N = 680) | 23 (19) | 100 (18) | 123 (18) | NS |
| Schizophrenia (N = 684) | 25 (20) | 84 (15) | 109 (16) | NS |
| Drug use disorder (N = 689) | 74 (60) | 236 (42) | 310 (45) |
|
| Alcohol use disorder (N = 695) | 34 (27) | 171 (30) | 205 (30) | NS |
| Received SUD treatment in prison (N = 362) | 53 (65) | 201 (72) | 254 (70) | NS |
Italic = statistically significant
Post-release illicit substance use for 751 participants who received medical care following release from prison
| Illicit substance use | Never* N (%) | No use since release* N (%) | Use post-release* N (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cannabis (N = 744) | 155 (21) | 503 (68) | 86 (12) |
| Cocaine (N = 746) | 325 (44) | 391 (52) | 30 (4) |
| Heroin/Opioids (N = 740) | 445 (60) | 263 (36) | 32 (4) |
| Amphetamine (N = 740) | 547 (74) | 184 (25) | 9 (1) |
| Hallucinogens (N = 742) | 581 (78) | 157 (21) | 4 (1) |
| MDMA (N = 625) | 546 (87) | 78 (12) | 1 |
| Illicit prescriptions (N = 715) | 538 (75) | 154 (22) | 23 (3) |
| Any illicit drug Use (N = 751) | 91 (12) | 526 (70) | 134 (18) |
*Percentages are of participants who reported any substance use status for each separate substance
Factors associated with post-release illicit substance use
| Independent variable* | Odds ratio | 95% confidence interval |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 0.98 | 0.96–1.00 |
| Male | 3.91 | 1.73–8.81 |
| Black | 1.31 | 0.82–2.09 |
| Unstable housing | 1.68 | 0.58–4.82 |
| Institutional housing | 0.81 | 0.28–2.35 |
| Doubling up | 3.33 | 1.20–9.28 |
| Length of most recent incarceration (years) | 0.93 | 0.89–0.98 |
| Time to TCN engagement (weeks) | 1.07 | 1.03–1.10 |
| Parole | 0.58 | 0.34–0.99 |
| Depression | 1.32 | 0.82–2.13 |
| Bipolar disorder | 1.62 | 0.97–2.71 |
| Drug use disorder | 2.27 | 1.40–3.68 |
*662 participants with complete data included in regression