Author:
Martin Karin,Taylor Andrew,Howell Benjamin,Fox Aaron
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to determine whether criminal justice (CJ) stigma affects health outcomes and health care utilization.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors reviewed medical and public health literature through May 2020. Structured terms were used to search four databases identifying articles that related to CJ stigma. Included articles were in English, examined CJ stigma and had people with CJ involvement as subjects. The studies without health outcomes were excluded. Quantitative and qualitative studies were reviewed and assessed for bias. Results were synthesized into a systematic review.
Findings
The search yielded 25 studies relating to CJ stigma and health. Three stigma domains were described in the literature: perceived or enacted, internalized and anticipated stigma. Tenuous evidence linked CJ stigma to health directly (psychological symptoms) and indirectly (social isolation, health care utilization, high-risk behaviors and housing or employment). Multiple stigmatized identities may interact to affect health and health care utilization.
Research limitations/implications
Few studies examined CJ stigma and health. Articles used various measures of CJ stigma, but psychometric properties for instruments were not presented. Prospective studies with standard validated measures are needed.
Practical implications
Understanding whether and how CJ stigma affects health and health care utilization will be critical for developing health-promoting interventions for people with CJ involvement. Practical interventions could target stigma-related psychological distress or reduce health care providers’ stigmatizing behaviors.
Originality/value
This was the first systematic review of CJ stigma and health. By providing a summary of the current evidence and identifying consistent findings and gaps in the literature, this review provides direction for future research and highlights implications for policy and practice.
Subject
Health Professions (miscellaneous)
Reference80 articles.
1. Motivation to reduce risky behaviors while in prison: qualitative analysis of interviews with current and formerly incarcerated women;Journal of Qualitative Criminal Justice & Criminology,2013
2. If they’re your doctor, they should care about you’: women on release from prison and general practitioners;Australian Family Physician,2016
3. Medical homelessness and candidacy: women transiting between prison and community health care;International Journal for Equity in Health,2017
4. Relationship of subjective and objective social status with psychological and physiological functioning: preliminary data in healthy, white women;Health Psychology,2000
5. Discrimination fully mediates the effects of incarceration history on depressive symptoms and psychological distress among African American men;Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities,2018
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献