Title: Lock In Model of Mass Imprisonment and HIV
1Lock In Model of Mass Imprisonment and HIV
- Sharif Sawires
- CHAMP
- University of California David Geffen School of
Medicine - Program in Global Health
- Center for HIV Identification, Prevention and
Treatment Services
2Outline
- Discuss a framework for thinking about mass
imprisonment, HIV, and communities of color - Brief overview of mass detention in the U.S.
- Introduce the idea of Core Communities
- Brief overview of the Epidemiology of HIV and
Imprisonment - Churning and Impact
- Salient points about Impact on Communities of
color
3Framework
- Early Mover Advantage
- Long Wave Impact
- and
- Lock-In
4U.S. Prison Population 2008
- The U.S. incarcerates more people than any other
country in the world. - 2.3 Million Adults in 2008
- 1,596,127 in state or federal prison
- another 723,131 in local jails
- 1 in every 100 Adults
5Race/Ethnicity 2006
- Black men 41 of inmates
- About 4.8 of all Black men are in custody
- 1.9 of Latino males
- .7 of White males
- Black women were incarcerated in at nearly 4
times the rate of white women and more than twice
the rate of Latina women. - Latinas were incarcerated at 1.6 times the rate
of white women
6HIV in U.S Prisons
- Persons at risk for incarceration are also more
likely to be at elevated risk for HIV infection
and this is particularly true for females as
prisons are the only setting in the US where HIV
Prevalence is higher in females than males - 1.6
in males and 2.4 in Females (BJS 2006).
7Comparison of Global Incarcerators
- U.S. 1 at 2.3 million
- 750 per 100,000 (rank 1)
- China 2 at 1.5 million
- 119 per 100,000 (rank 113)
- Russia Federation
- 633 per 100,00 (rank 2)
8Incarceration Rate Disparities
9Growth In U.S. Prison Population 1987-2007
10US Comparison to 36 largest European
11Policy Changes Drive Growth
- Changes begin in mid 1970s
- Longer sentences is a major factor
- Mandatory minimums
- Truth in Sentencing
- Increase in punitive response to drug sentencing.
- Impact of Race Neutral policies
12Impact of Drug Sentencing On Black Communities
13People Living with HIV/AIDS and Incarceration
- It is estimated that each year, approximately 25
of all HIV positive persons in the United States
spend time in prison or jail. - 12-15 of those with chronic hepatitis B virus
(HBV) and 39 with chronic hepatitis C virus
(HCV) in the United States pass through or are
released from State or Federal correctional
facilities annually.
14ART Effectiveness
- In the United States, HIV-positive state and
federal prisoners often have positive HIV-related
health outcomes while incarcerated. - Increased CD4 counts
- Decreased viral loads
- The positive health effects are rapidly lost
after soon after release. - Springer SA, et al 2004
15Core Communities
- Prisoners are disproportionately selected from
and released to a small number of core
communities - These same core communities have high numbers of
persons that repeatedly churn back and forth
between prison and the community, frequently for
technical parole violations.
16Tipping Points
- The impact of nearly 700,000 people annually
returning from prison to their communities and
families is far reaching - Volume of this population cycling through core
communities dramatically changes the social and
public health character of the population in
these areas
17Community Reentry the acute period of risk
- The period immediately following release from
prison is a critical time for health and social
service interventions
18More Incarcerations/More ReleasesChurning
- Nearly all prisoners will be released within 5
years of admission (Travis, 2005) - Although the average state sentence is 4 ½ years,
the average inmate will serve lt2 1/2 years. - Slightly less then ½ of the population of inmates
are released each year. ( in 2005 733,009
admitted to State and Fed while 676,952
released). - Nationally over ½ of released inmates return to
prison within 3 years for a new crime or
violating parole.
19Community Stability
- What is clear is that mass incarceration and high
recidivism rates are adding to the accumulation
of disadvantage by destabilizing communities,
their sexual networks, and increasing infectious
disease risks.
20Most HIV Transmission Happens in Community
Settings?
- Georgia state prison study demonstrated although
transmission does happen in prison, it is most
likely that the majority of HIV positive
individuals get infected in community settings
(MMWR, 2006). - Large number of studies demonstrating high HIV
prevalence at entry to Jail or Prison for men and
women (Macalino GE 2006, Rich JD 1999, de Ravello
L 2205, Kassira EN 2001, Solomon L 2004, Wu ZH
2001). - Limitations to these assumptions.
21Heightened Attention to Communities of Color
- Heightened attention to why HIV among men and
women of color is increasing so rapidly - Links between mass imprisonment and increased
risk of HIV/STIs are complex, institutionally
driven, and long-wave events. - CDC 2006 HIV Incidence Numbers
22Social and Sexual Networks
- Know a lot about individual risk behaviors in
community settings. - Growing body of reliable accounts and scientific
evidence on risk while incarcerated. - What we dont have a lot of is understanding how
relative risk changes as folks transition between
community/detention and understanding
incarceration as a structural determinant of
community health. - As advocates and investigators we need to do a
lot more connecting of the dots.
23Social and Sexual Networks
- Network turnover and concurrency.
- Removing mass numbers of males from communities
destabilizes social networks and courtship
patterns. - Bridging between partners from higher and lower
HIV-risk groups.
24Impact
- Incarceration, network stability, and HIV risk
- Diminishing stable partnerships and creating
environments that facilitate concurrency - Reducing womens ability to negotiate terms of
sexual relationships and employ risk reducing
strategies
25A Perfect Storm and Lock-In
- Many mutually reinforcing factors that come
together so that even post-release- in the
absence of an individuals detention- deleterious
population-level health effects continue.
26- Simply put, we will never rid the United States
of HIV and other STDs if our only weapon is
medical treatment. And if we are unable to engage
in a national dialogue about the sexual health of
our youths and the social dynamics that drive
STDs, this epidemic will go largely ignored, and
many more lives will be lost. - (Fullilove, Adimora, Leone 2008)