Post-release substance abuse outcomes among HIV-infected jail detainees: results from a multisite study

Archana Krishnan, Jeffrey A Wickersham, Ehsan Chitsaz, Sandra A Springer, Alison O Jordan, Nick Zaller, Frederick L Altice, Archana Krishnan, Jeffrey A Wickersham, Ehsan Chitsaz, Sandra A Springer, Alison O Jordan, Nick Zaller, Frederick L Altice

Abstract

HIV-infected individuals with substance use disorders have a high prevalence of medical and psychiatric morbidities that complicate treatment. Incarceration further disrupts healthcare access and utilization. Without appropriate diagnosis and treatment, drug relapse upon release exceeds 85 %, which contributes to poor health outcomes. A prospective cohort of 1,032 HIV-infected jail detainees were surveyed in a ten-site demonstration project during incarceration and six-months post-release, in order to examine the effect of predisposing factors, enabling resources and need factors on their subsequent drug use. Homelessness, pre-incarceration cocaine and opioid use, and high drug and alcohol severity were significantly associated with cocaine and opioid relapse. Substance abuse treatment, though poorly defined, did not influence post-release cocaine and opioid use. An approach that integrates multiple services, simultaneously using evidence-based substance abuse, psychiatric care, and social services is needed to improve healthcare outcomes for HIV-infected persons transitioning from jails to the community.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Participant Disposition
Figure 2
Figure 2
Conceptual model for post-release substance abuse outcomes among HIV-infected jail detainees

Source: PubMed

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