12 results on '"Spaulding, Anne C"'
Search Results
2. Estimates of Hepatitis C Seroprevalence and Viremia in State Prison Populations in the United States.
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Spaulding, Anne C, Kennedy, Shanika S, Osei, Jeffery, Sidibeh, Ebrima, Batina, Isabella V, Chhatwal, Jagpreet, Akiyama, Matthew J, and Strick, Lara B
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PRISON population , *HEPATITIS C , *HEPATITIS C virus , *SEROPREVALENCE , *PRISONERS - Abstract
Background Prior studies demonstrate that eliminating hepatitis C virus (HCV) in the United States (US) heavily depends on treating incarcerated persons. Knowing the scope of the carceral HCV epidemic by state will help guide national elimination efforts. Methods Between 2019 and 2023, all state prison systems received surveys requesting data on hepatitis C antibody and viremic prevalence. We supplemented survey information with publicly available HCV data to corroborate responses and fill in data gaps. Results Weighting HCV prevalence by state prison population size, we estimate that 15.2% of the US prison population is HCV seropositive and 8.7% is viremic; 54.9% of seropositive persons have detectable RNA. Applying prevalence estimates to the total prison population at year-end 2021, 91 090 persons with HCV infection resided in a state prison. Conclusions With updated and more complete HCV data from all 50 states, HCV prevalence in state prisons is nearly 9-fold higher than the US general population. The heterogeneity in HCV prevalence by state prison system may reflect variable exposure before arrest and/or differences in treatment availability during incarceration. Elimination of HCV in the country depends on addressing the carceral epidemic, and one of the first steps is understanding the size of the problem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Stakeholder-engaged research is necessary across the criminal-legal spectrum.
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Wurcel, Alysse G., Kraus, Christina, Johnson, O'Dell, Zaller, Nicholas D., Ray, Bradley, Spaulding, Anne C., Flynn, Tara, Quinn, Cynthia, Day, Ronald, Akiyama, Matthew J., Del Pozo, Brandon, Meyer, Fred, and Glenn, Jason E.
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People with lived experience of incarceration have higher rates of morbidity and mortality compared to people without history of incarceration. Research conducted unethically in prisons and jails led to increased scrutiny of research to ensure the needs of those studied are protected. One consequence of increased restrictions on research with criminal-legal involved populations is reluctance to engage in research evaluations of healthcare for people who are incarcerated and people who have lived experience of incarceration. Ethical research can be done in partnership with people with lived experience of incarceration and other key stakeholders and should be encouraged. In this article, we describe how stakeholder engagement can be accomplished in this setting, and further, how such engagement leads to impactful research that can be disseminated and implemented across disciplines and communities. The goal is to build trust across the spectrum of people who work, live in, or are impacted by the criminal-legal system, with the purpose of moving toward health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. HIV-Related Research in Correctional Populations: Now is the Time
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Rich, Josiah D., Wohl, David A., Beckwith, Curt G., Spaulding, Anne C., Lepp, Nathaniel E., Baillargeon, Jacques, Gardner, Adrian, Avery, Ann, Altice, Frederick L., Springer, Sandra, and On behalf of the Centers for AIDS Research—Collaboration on HIV in Corrections (CFAR-CHIC) Working Group
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- 2011
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5. Prevalence and Management of Sexually Transmitted Infections in Correctional Settings: A Systematic Review.
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Spaulding, Anne C, Rabeeah, Zainab, González-Montalvo, Myrna del Mar, Akiyama, Matthew J, Baker, Brenda J, Bauer, Heidi M, Gibson, Brent R, Nijhawan, Ank E, Parvez, Farah, Wangu, Zoon, Chan, Philip A, and Corrections, Rollins Investigational Team on STIs in
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DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections , *SEXUALLY transmitted disease treatment , *EPIDEMIOLOGY of sexually transmitted diseases , *IMMIGRANTS , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *HEALTH services accessibility , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *TRICHOMONIASIS , *MEDICAL screening , *RACE , *JUVENILE offenders , *DISEASE management - Abstract
Admissions to jails and prisons in the United States number 10 million yearly; persons entering locked correctional facilities have high prevalence of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). These individuals come disproportionately from communities of color, with lower access to care and prevention, compared with the United States as a whole. Following PRISMA guidelines, the authors present results of a systematic review of literature published since 2012 on STIs in US jails, prisons, Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers, and juvenile facilities. This updates an earlier review of STIs in short-term facilities. This current review contributed to new recommendations in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2021 treatment guidelines for STIs, advising screening for Trichomonas in women entering correctional facilities. The current review also synthesizes recommendations on screening: in particular, opt-out testing is superior to opt-in protocols. Carceral interventions—managing diagnosed cases and preventing new infections from occurring (eg, by initiating human immunodeficiency virus preexposure prophylaxis before release)—can counteract structural racism in healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Vaccination in Prisons and Jails: Corrections Needed in Future Plans.
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Spaulding, Anne C and Zawitz, Chad
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CORRECTIONAL institutions , *COVID-19 , *IMMUNIZATION , *COVID-19 vaccines , *SERIAL publications , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *MORTALITY , *MESSENGER RNA , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The article discusses an observational study of outcomes in the California prison system after vaccinating half of a 60 700-person cohort against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) between December 2020 and March 2021. Topics include vaccine used varied over time, while waves of vaccine recipients went from highest to lower priority; thus, the California prison experience does not provide a head-to-head comparison of the 2 vaccines.
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- 2022
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7. Funding Hepatitis C Treatment in Correctional Facilities by Using a Nominal Pricing Mechanism.
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Spaulding, Anne C., Chhatwal, Jagpreet, Adee, Madeline G., Lawrence, Robert T., Beckwith, Curt G., and von Oehsen, William
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HEPATITIS C prevention ,HEPATITIS C treatment ,MEDICAL care cost laws ,CORRECTIONAL institutions ,COST control ,RESEARCH funding ,VIRAL hepatitis ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,VACCINATION ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The cost of treating all incarcerated people who have hepatitis C with direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) greatly stresses correctional facility budgets. Complex federal laws bar pharmaceutical companies from simply discounting expensive medications to prices that facilities can afford. This article discusses means by which correctional facilities may qualify under federal law as "safety-net providers" to allow sale of DAAs at a price <10% of the average manufacturer price (AMP). No new laws would need to be enacted to implement this strategy. Using fiscal year 2018 pricing data from the Georgia Department of Corrections, we derived an estimate for the AMP and then used this estimate to calculate a nominal price. The United States would save ~$3 billion if manufacturers sold DAAs at a nominal price to correctional facilities. Use of this strategy would help solve the conundrum of how state and county governments can pay for hepatitis C treatment and would ultimately save money for society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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8. Smoking in Correctional Settings Worldwide: Prevalence, Bans, and Interventions.
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Spaulding, Anne C, Eldridge, Gloria D, Chico, Cynthia E, Morisseau, Nancy, Drobeniuc, Ana, Fils-Aime, Rebecca, Day, Carolyn, Hopkins, Robyn, Jin, Xingzhong, Chen, Junyu, and Dolan, Kate A
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Smoking tobacco contributes to 11.5% of deaths worldwide and, in some countries, more hospitalizations than alcohol and drugs combined. Globally in 2015, 25% of men and 5% of women smoked. In the United States, a higher proportion of people in prison smoke than do community-dwelling individuals. To determine smoking prevalence in prisons worldwide, we systematically reviewed the literature using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines; we also examined whether prisons banned smoking or treated smokers. We searched databases for articles published between 2012 and 2016 and located 85 relevant articles with data representing 73.5% of all incarcerated persons from 50 countries. In 35 of 36 nations (97%) with published prevalence data, smoking for the incarcerated exceeded community rates 1.04- to 62.6-fold. Taking a conservative estimate of a 2-fold increase, we estimated that, globally, 14.5 million male and 26,000 female smokers pass through prisons annually. Prison authorities' responses include permitting, prohibiting, or treating tobacco use. Bans may temporarily improve health and reduce in-prison health care costs but have negligible effect after prison release. Evidence-based interventions for smoking cessation effective outside prisons are effective inside; effects persist after release. Because smoking prevalence is heightened in prisons, offering evidence-based interventions to nearly 15 million smokers passing through yearly would improve global health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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9. HIV and HCV in U.S. Prisons and Jails: The Correctional Facility as a Bellwether Over Time for the Community's Infections.
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Spaulding, Anne C., Anderson, Emeli J., Khan, Mohammed A., Taborda-Vidarte, Cesar A., and Phillips, Jennifer A.
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HIV infections ,THERAPEUTICS ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,DISEASE prevalence ,INTRAVENOUS drug abusers ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse - Abstract
Screening and treating correctional populations for HIV and HCV infections is essential to successfully addressing both epidemics in the USA. The prevalence of HIV and HCV infection is high in prisons and jails due to increased rates of incarceration among disproportionately affected groups such as injection drug users. Through a search of the published and grey literature and surveying persons overseeing health programs in prisons, we collected data on efforts to determine prevalence fi rst for HIV and then for HCV. Prevalence of both infections varies geographically and temporally, refl ecting epidemics in the community as well as local law enforcement policies. We estimate that seroprevalence of HCV in 2015 for persons in U.S. prisons averaged 18%, over tenfold greater than HIV. For both, transmission and acquisition during incarceration are rare. Screening can identify previously undetected cases: the efficiency of a testing strategy depends on local conditions. Universal opt-out screening of entrants is usually best as conducting risk-based screening has challenges. With HCV, the advent of highly effective regimens makes cure feasible. Treatment within facilities has the potential to reduce HCV incidence and disease burden in the community, especially in difficult-to-reach populations. The extraordinarily high cost of HCV treatment regimens and lack of political will are the main barriers to treatment expansion. Just as community-wide HIV viral suppression has required correctional/community coordination, elimination of HCV infection in the USA will depend on a thoughtful, well-funded effort to manage this disease in populations interacting with the criminal justice system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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10. The Names Have Been Changed to Protect the ... Humanity: Person-First Language in Correctional Health Epidemiology.
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Bedell, Precious S., Spaulding, Anne C., So, Marvin, and Sarrett, Jennifer C.
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HEALTH , *HEALTH status indicators , *HUMANISM , *LINGUISTICS , *PRISONERS , *SOCIAL stigma , *TERMS & phrases , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness - Abstract
After objections surfaced following a call for papers on "Prisoner Health," the editors of Epidemiologic Reviews decided to rename this year's volume "Incarceration and Health." In this commentary, we trace the origins of person-first language and explain why using appropriate terms in correctional health, including correctional health epidemiology, matters. We discuss the potential consequences of person-first language for justice-involved individuals and how inclusive language might affect the social, emotional, and physical well-being of individuals, families, and communities. Future directions may include measuring health outcomes when language is systematically changed. The barriers that thwart successful reentry may wane when dehumanizing language disappears. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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11. How Public Health and Prisons Can Partner for Pandemic Influenza Preparedness: A Report From Georgia.
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Spaulding, Anne C., McCallum, Victoria A., Walker, Dawn, Reeves, Ariane, Drenzek, Cherie, Lewis, Sharon, Bailey, Ed, Buehler, James W., Spotts Whitney, Ellen A., and Berkelman, Ruth L.
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As pandemic influenza becomes an increasing threat, partnerships between public health and correctional facilities are necessary to prepare criminal justice systems adequately. In September 2007, the Planning for Pandemic Influenza in Prison Settings Conference took place in Georgia. This article describes the collaboration and ongoing goals established between administrative leaders and medical staff in Georgia prison facilities and public health officials. Sessions covered topics such as nonpharmaceutical interventions, health care surge capacity, and prison-community interfaces. Interactive activities and tabletop scenarios were used to promote dynamic learning, and pretests and posttests were administered to evaluate the short-term impact of conference participation. The conference has been followed by subsequent meetings and an ongoing process to guide prisons' preparation for pandemic influenza. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2009
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12. Prisons can also improve drug user health in the community.
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Martin, Natasha K., Hickman, Matthew, Spaulding, Anne C., and Vickerman, Peter
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MEDICAL care of prisoners ,INTRAVENOUS drug abusers ,TREATMENT of drug addiction ,SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,HEPATITIS C prevention ,CORRECTIONAL institutions ,DRUG abuse - Published
- 2020
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