HIV/AIDS, hepatitis and tuberculosis-related mortality among incarcerated people: a global scoping review

Author:

Bosworth Rebecca Jane,Borschmann Rohan,Altice Frederick L.,Kinner Stuart Alistair,Dolan Kate,Farrell Michael

Abstract

Purpose People in prison are at a higher risk of preventable mortality from infectious disease such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), hepatitis B (HBV), hepatitis C (HCV) and tuberculosis (TB) than those in the community. The extent of infectious disease-related mortality within the prison setting remains unclear. The purpose of this paper was to collate available information on infectious disease-related mortality, including the number of deaths and calculate the person-time death rate. Design/methodology/approach The authors searched databases between 1 January 2000 and 18 November 2020 for studies reporting HIV, HBV, HCV, TB and/or HIV/TB-related deaths among people in prison. Findings The authors identified 78 publications drawn from seven Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS’ regions encompassing 33 countries and reporting on 6,568 deaths in prison over a 20-year period. HIV/AIDS (n = 3,305) was associated with the highest number of deaths, followed by TB (n = 2,892), HCV (n = 189), HIV/TB (n = 173) and HBV (n = 9). Due to the limitations of the available published data, it was not possible to meta-analyse or in any other way synthesise the available evidence. Research limitations/implications To inform targeted efforts to reduce mortality, there is a need for more, better quality data to understand infectious disease-related mortality in custodial settings. Increased investment in the prevention and management of infectious diseases in custodial settings, and in documenting infectious disease-related deaths in prison, is warranted and will yield public health benefits. Originality/value To the authors’ best knowledge, this is the first scoping review focussed on deaths due to these infections among people in prison internationally. The gaps identified form recommendations to improve the future collection and reporting of prison mortality data.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Health Professions (miscellaneous)

Reference52 articles.

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3. Australian Government Institute of Criminology (2019), “Deaths in custody”, available at: www.aic.gov.au/publications/sr (accessed 11 January 2021).

4. Australian Institue of Health and Welfare (2019), “How are causes of death coded?”, available at: www.aihw.gov.au/about-our-data/our-data-collections/national-mortality-database/how-are-causes-of-death-coded (accessed 28 May 2019).

5. Bosworth, R. Salah, E. Lehtovuori, R. Kinner, S.A. Altice, F.L. Farrell, M. Moazen, B. and Dolan, K. (2018), “Leave no one behind: HIV testing, treatment and AIDS-related mortality among people in prison”, available at: https://ashm.org.au/Conferences/conferences-we-organise/the-hiv-aids-conference/ (accessed 2 May 2021).

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