Prison primary care and non-communicable diseases: a data-linkage survey of prevalence and associated risk factors

Author:

Wright Nat MJ,Hearty Philippa,Allgar Victoria

Abstract

BackgroundThe size and mean age of the prison population has increased rapidly in recent years. Prisoners are a vulnerable group who, compared with the general population, experience poorer health outcomes. However, there is a dearth of research quantifying the prevalence of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) among prisoner populations.AimTo explore both the prevalence of NCDs and their risk factors.Design & settingA cross-sectional survey was undertaken that was compared with clinical records in two male prisons in the north of England.MethodSelf-report surveys were completed by 199 prisoners to assess sociodemographic characteristics, general health, NCD prevalence, and risk factor prevalence. Data were checked against that retrieved from prison clinical records.ResultsIt was found that 46% reported at least one NCD and 26% reported at least one physical health NCD. The most common self-reported NCD was 'anxiety and depression' (34%), followed by 'respiratory disease' (17%), and 'hypertension' (10%). Having a physical health NCD was independently associated with increasing age or drug dependence.The level of agreement between clinical records and self-report ranged from 'fair' for alcohol dependence (kappa 0.38; P<0.001) to 'very good' for diabetes (kappa 0.86; P<0.001).ConclusionCompared with mainstream populations and despite high prevalence of risk factors for NCDs physical illness NCDs, with the exception of respiratory disease, are less common. However, poor mental health is more common. These differences are possibly owing to the younger average age of prison populations, since prevalence of risk factors was reported as high.Secondary data analysis of clinical records is a more methodologically robust way of monitoring trends in prisoner population disease prevalence.

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

Subject

Family Practice

Reference39 articles.

1. Walmsley R (2015) World prison population list (Institute for Criminal Policy Research, London), 11th edn.

2. Ministry of Justice (2017) Population and capacity briefing for Friday 14 July 2017. https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/628635/prison-pop-14-july-2017.ods. 13 May 2019.

3. House of Commons Justice Committee (2013) Older prisoners: fifth report of session 2013–14. https://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-committees/Justice/Older-prisoners.pdf. 2 Apr 2019.

4. Howse K (2011) Growing old in prison: a scoping study on older prisoners (Prison Reform Trust, London).

5. Ministry of Justice (2016) Prison population projections 2016–2021 England and Wales: Ministry of Justice statistics bulletin (Ministry of Justice, London).

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