Self‐stigma of incarceration and its impact on health and community integration

Author:

Brehmer Chelsea E.1ORCID,Qin Sang1ORCID,Young Brigette C.1ORCID,Strauser David R.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rehabilitation Psychology and Special Education University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

2. Department of Kinesiology and Community Health University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIndividuals returning to the wider community from incarceration face many re‐entry barriers, including stigmatising beliefs regarding past criminal record, that have impact on health and re‐entry. Understanding the development and impact of self‐stigma on health can inform re‐entry and rehabilitation services.AimsThe two aims of this study were first, to evaluate a previously established model of self‐stigma applied to individuals who have experienced incarceration and, secondly, to study the impact of self‐stigma on physical and mental health as well as community integration on re‐entry.MethodsThis is a cross‐sectional study of 129 formerly incarcerated adults recruited using an online platform and asked to complete online rating scales about self‐stigmatisation, health and sense of community integration. Repeated‐measures analysis of variance, correlation analysis, and path analyses were used to evaluate the model.ResultsThere was support for the four distinct stages of self‐stigmatisation apparent in mental health research. There was a relationship between self‐stigma harm and sense of community integration, mediated by mental but not physical health status scores.ConclusionOur findings add to work on self‐stigmatisation in the field of mental health by showing that the concept appears relevant and appears in similar staging among formerly incarcerated individuals and that self‐stigmatisation is likely to be important for their community reintegration. Our sample was not typical of the wider prison population for race and gender distribution, in particular having fewer than expected those minority groups likely to be especially vulnerable to stigmatisation by others. Our findings nevertheless suggest that further, preferably, longitudinal research on self‐stigma to enable better understanding of pathways could substantially help treatment and rehabilitation of individuals after release from a correctional facility.

Funder

U.S. Department of Education

Publisher

Wiley

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