Project 461778

An evaluation of the health, criminal justice, and service use outcomes of the Ministry of Health assuming responsibility for prison health care services in BC (PRISM-BC)

461778

An evaluation of the health, criminal justice, and service use outcomes of the Ministry of Health assuming responsibility for prison health care services in BC (PRISM-BC)

$638,776
Project Information
Study Type: Unclear
Research Theme: Health systems / services
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Slaunwhite, Amanda K; Nicholls, Tonia L; Schütz, Christian G
Co-Investigator(s): Bartlett, Sofia R; Gan, Wenqi; Greiner, Leigh; Kinner, Stuart; Martin, Ruth E; McLeod, Katherine E; Palis, Heather; Samji, Hasina; Urbanoski, Karen A
Institution: University of British Columbia
CIHR Institute: Health Services and Policy Research
Program: Project Grant
Peer Review Committee: Health Services Evaluation & Interventions Research
Competition Year: 2022
Term: 4 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

People who go to correctional centres (prisons) experience poorer health compared with the general population. They have higher rates of overdose, substance use, mental illness and sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections. To reduce unequal health outcomes and respond to provincial public health challenges like the overdose crisis, there has been significant interest in improving health care in correctional centres. Better quality and availability of health care services in correctional centres can improve the health of people who are incarcerated and reduce the chance that people will commit future crimes. In 2017, the responsibility for delivering health care in British Columbia's (BC) provincial correctional centres was transferred from a provincial ministry of justice to a provincial health agency. The objective of this project is to determine whether the change in management of health care improved the health of people who have been in BC's provincial correctional centres. We will use linked health and corrections records over a 10-year period (Jan. 1, 2012 to Dec. 31, 2022) to identify changes in health care delivery, death from overdose and from all-causes, and crime for approximately 5 years before and 5 years after the transfer of health care services. This project is critical to national and international efforts to reform the delivery of health care services for people who experience incarceration. Findings can be used to inform policies and procedures in both criminal justice and community health systems.

No special research characteristics identified

This project does not include any of the advanced research characteristics tracked in our database.

Keywords
Administrative Health Data Health Care Governance Health Care Systems Health Equity Health Of Incarcerated Populations Interrupted Time Series