Impact of dual diagnosis on healthcare and criminal justice costs after release from Queensland prisons: a prospective cohort study

Author:

Snow K. J.,Petrie D.,Young J. T.,Preen D. B.,Heffernan E.,Kinner S. A.

Abstract

Background People released from prison have poorer health than the general public, with a particularly high prevalence of mental illness and harmful substance use. High-frequency use of hospital-based services is costly, and greater investment in transitional support and primary care services to improve the health of people leaving prison may therefore be cost-effective. Methods A prospective cohort study of 1303 men and women released from prisons in Queensland, Australia, between 2008 and 2010, using linked data was performed. We calculated healthcare costs and the cost of re-incarceration. We compared healthcare costs to the general public, and assessed the impact of past mental illness, substance use disorder, and dual diagnosis on both healthcare and criminal justice costs. Results Healthcare costs among the cohort were 2.1-fold higher than expected based on costs among the public. Dual diagnosis was associated with 3.5-fold higher healthcare costs (95% CI 2.6–4.6) and 2.8-fold higher re-incarceration costs (95% CI 1.6–5.0), compared with no past diagnosis of either mental illness or substance use disorder. Conclusions People released from prison incur high healthcare costs, primarily due to high rates of engagement with emergency health services and hospital admissions. Comorbid mental illness and substance use disorders are associated with high health and criminal justice costs among people recently released from prison.

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference24 articles.

1. Do programs for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people leaving prison meet their health and social support needs?;Australian Journal of Rural Health,2018

2. Inpatient hospital use in the first year after release from prison: a Western Australian population-based record linkage study.;Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health,2011

3. Access block to psychiatric inpatient admission: implications for national mental health service planning.;The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry,2018

4. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2009) ‘Prisoners in Australia.’ (Australian Bureau of Statistics: Canberra, ACT, Australia) Available at [Verified 30 June 2021]

5. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2021) ‘Consumer price index.’ (Australian Bureau of Statistics: Canberra, ACT, Australia) Available at [Verified 30 June 2021]

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