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      Changes in health-related quality of life following imprisonment in 92 women in England: a three month follow-up study

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          Abstract

          Background

          Despite the considerable changes in the provision of health care to prisoners in the UK there is little published literature that attempts to examine broader aspects of health and the impact of imprisonment on these, focusing instead on disease specific areas. This is surprising given that one of the main drivers behind the changes was the need for improvements in the quality of care; examining changes in health outcomes should be an important part of monitoring service developments. This study assessed the health-related quality of life of women on entry into prison and examined changes during a period of three months imprisonment.

          Methods

          This was a prospective longitudinal study involving 505 women prisoners in England. The SF-36 was contained within a questionnaire designed to examine many aspects of imprisoned women's health. Participants completed this questionnaire within 72 hours of entering prison. The researchers followed up all participants who were still imprisoned three months later.

          Results

          The study achieved good response rates: 82% of women agreed to participate initially (n = 505), and 93% of those still imprisoned participating three months later (n = 112). At prison entry, women prisoners have lower mental component summary score (MCS) and physical component summary score (PCS) compared to women within the general population. The mental well-being of those 112 women still imprisoned after three months improved over this period of imprisonment, although remained poorer than that of the general population. The PCS did not improve significantly and remained significantly lower than that of the general population. Multivariate analyses showed that the only independent predictor of change in component score was the score at baseline.

          Conclusions

          The results highlight the poor health-related quality of life of women prisoners and highlight the scale of the challenge faced by those providing health care to prisoners. They also draw attention to the major health disadvantages of women offenders compared to women in general. While recent reforms may improve health services for prisoners, broader inequalities in the health of women are a more complex challenge.

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          Most cited references13

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          Substance abuse and dependence in prisoners: a systematic review.

          To review studies of the prevalence of substance abuse and dependence in prisoners on reception into custody. A systematic review of studies measuring the prevalence of drug and alcohol abuse and dependence in male and female prisoners on reception into prison was conducted. Only studies using standardized diagnostic criteria were included. Relevant information, such as mean age, gender and type of prisoner, was recorded for eligible studies. The prevalence estimates were compared with those from large cross-sectional studies of prevalence in prison populations. Thirteen studies with a total of 7563 prisoners met the review criteria. There was substantial heterogeneity among the studies. The estimates of prevalence for alcohol abuse and dependence in male prisoners ranged from 18 to 30% and 10 to 24% in female prisoners. The prevalence estimates of drug abuse and dependence varied from 10 to 48% in male prisoners and 30 to 60% in female prisoners. The prevalence of substance abuse and dependence, although highly variable, is typically many orders of magnitude higher in prisoners than the general population, particularly for women with drug problems. This highlights the need for screening for substance abuse and dependence at reception into prison, effective treatment while in custody, and follow-up on release. Specialist addiction services for prisoners have the potential to make a considerable impact.
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            The outcomes of pregnancy among imprisoned women: a systematic review.

            To investigate the association between maternal imprisonment during pregnancy and perinatal outcomes. Systematic review and meta-analysis. Prisons in developed countries. Imprisoned pregnant women. Two reviewers extracted the data independently according to a fixed protocol. Studies were included if they were cohort or case-control studies with women identified as being imprisoned at any point during pregnancy and if they included a comparison group of women who had not been imprisoned. Case series without a comparison group of women who were not imprisoned were excluded, as were studies that did not include information on the pre-specified outcomes. Perinatal or infant death, stillbirth, preterm delivery, low birthweight, fetal anomalies and use of breast milk substitutes. Of 28 relevant papers, 10 met the inclusion criteria, involving 1960 imprisoned pregnant women and 10,858 controls. There were significant differences in results between studies comparing imprisoned women with population controls and those making comparisons with disadvantaged control women. Imprisoned women are more likely to deliver prematurely and have a low birthweight baby than population control women. However, when compared with a similarly disadvantaged group, imprisoned woman are less likely to have a stillbirth or low birthweight baby, suggesting imprisonment may have a beneficial effect. Particular perinatal outcomes appear to be improved in imprisoned women compared with similarly disadvantaged women. Imprisonment of the mother has a beneficial effect on the birthweight of her baby.
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              The SF-36 physical and mental health summary measures: an example of how to interpret scores.

              To provide normative data, in the form of percentile scores from a community sample, for the Physical Component and Mental Health Component Summary scores derived from the SF-36, and to provide an example of how to interpret scores on these measures, comparing normative results with data from a clinical sample. Normative data were gained from a postal survey using a questionnaire, containing the SF-36 and a number of other items concerned with lifestyles and illness. The questionnaire was sent to 13,042 randomly selected subjects between the ages of 18 and 64 years, drawn from Family Health Services Authority computerised registers for four English counties. The clinical sample comprised 84 patients aged 18-64 years diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) who were asked to take part in the study. The Physical Component Summary (PCS) score and Mental Health Component Summary (MCS) score gained from the SF-36 health status measure were the outcome measures. The community survey achieved a response rate of 72% (n = 9332). All 84 patients in the age range 18-64 years approached to take part in the OSA study agreed to do so; complete data were available for 60 patients. Results indicated that, prior to treatment, 75% of OSA patients' scores on the PCS/MCS were less than the standardised mean score of 50 and fell in the lowest 34% of scores in the general population. However, after treatment, over 50% of patients scored above the standardised mean score on both the PCS and MCS and more closely mirrored the distribution of the normative sample. The data provided here should enable a more meaningful presentation of data than is generally provided in research papers presenting SF-36 summary scores.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Int J Equity Health
                International Journal for Equity in Health
                BioMed Central
                1475-9276
                2011
                25 May 2011
                : 10
                : 21
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Public Health, University of Oxford
                Article
                1475-9276-10-21
                10.1186/1475-9276-10-21
                3130658
                21612600
                0f4003fc-c40e-4deb-b1de-55592713b708
                Copyright ©2011 Plugge et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 5 August 2010
                : 25 May 2011
                Categories
                Research

                Health & Social care
                Health & Social care

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