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PUBLIC HEALTH MATTERS |
Nicholas Freudenberg is with the Program in Urban Public Health and Jessie Daniels is with the Center for Community and Urban Health, Hunter College, City University of New York, New York, NY. Martha Crum is with the Department of Sociology, CUNY Graduate Center, New York, NY. Tiffany Perkins is an independent consultant based in Roselle, New Jersey. Beth E. Richie is with the Department of African-American Studies, University of IllinoisChicago.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Nicholas Freudenberg, DrPH, Urban Public Health, Hunter College, City University of New York, 425 E 25th St, New York, NY 10010 (e-mail: nfreuden{at}hunter.cuny.edu).
Each year, more than 10 million people enter US jails, most returning home within a few weeks. Because jails concentrate people with infectious and chronic diseases, substance abuse, and mental health problems, and reentry policies often exacerbate these problems, the experiences of people leaving jail may contribute to health inequities in the low-income communities to which they return.
Our study of the experiences in the year after release of 491 adolescent males and 476 adult women returning home from New York City jails shows that both populations have low employment rates and incomes and high rearrest rates. Few received services in jail. However, overall drug use and illegal activity declined significantly in the year after release. Postrelease employment and health insurance were associated with lower rearrest rates and drug use. Public policies on employment, drug treatment, housing, and health care often blocked successful reentry into society from jail, suggesting the need for new policies that support successful reentry into society.
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