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FIELD ACTION REPORT |
Janet Myers is with the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California, San Francisco, and is a regular evaluation collaborator with Centerforce. Barry Zack, Katie Kramer, Mick Gardner, Gonzalo Rucobo, and Stacy Costa-Taylor are with Centerforce, San Rafael, Calif.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Janet Myers, PhD, MPH, Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, UC San Francisco, 74 New Montgomery, Suite 600, San Francisco, CA 94105 (e-mail: jmyers{at}psg.ucsf.edu).
| ABSTRACT |
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Individuals leaving prison face challenges to establishing healthy lives in the community, including opportunities to engage in behavior that puts them at risk for HIV transmission. HIV prevention case management (PCM) can facilitate linkages to services, which in turn can help remove barriers to healthy behavior.
As part of a federally funded demonstration project, the community-based organization Centerforce provided 5 months of PCM to individuals leaving 3 state prisons in California. Program effects were measured by assessing changes in risk behavior, access to services, reincarnation, and program completion. Although response rates preclude definitive conclusions, HIV risk behavior did decrease. Regardless of race, age, or gender, those receiving comprehensive health services were significantly more likely to complete the program. PCM appears to facilitate healthy behavior for individuals leaving prison.
| INTRODUCTION |
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| PROGRAM DESCRIPTION |
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A single case manager worked with clients before and after their release to deliver comprehensive client-centered needs assessment, individualized care and treatment planning, facilitated referrals to community resources, liaison work with parole agents, and HIV risk reduction education and counseling. An average of 39 case management hours was delivered to each client (range= 4.5114 hours). About half (54.6%) of the 238 PCM-enrolled clients were men. Most were African American (48.7%) or Latino (26.1%). Sixteen percent were White and 9.2% were of another ethnicity. The mean age was 37 years (range=20 61 years).
| EVALUATION AND DISCUSSION |
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KEY FINDINGS
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| ABOUT CENTERFORCE The Centerforce mission is to strengthen individuals and families affected by incarceration through a comprehensive system of education and support. Centerforce provides services for prisoners, ex-prisoners, and family members of prisoners through direct services, its annual conference, and consultation and training services. Direct services for clients are provided by our four service areas: Children and Families Services, Transitional Services, Prisoner Service, and Informational Services. For more information, see http://www.centerforce.org.
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Assessing Risk and Behavior Change
Clients participating in the evaluation ("participants") completed risk behavior assessments 1 week and 10 weeks after release. At the first assessment, we asked participants about HIV risk and prevention behavior during the month prior to their most recent incarceration. At the second assessment, we asked about behavior in the previous month, during which they had been enrolled in the PCM program. Seventy-five individuals completed the 1-week assessment, of whom 51 completed the 10-week assessment. Our analysis of behavior change is limited to these 51 people.
On the basis of CDC-defined criteria, about half of the participants (n=36, or 48%) reported behavior that had ever put them at risk for contracting HIV. Seventeen participants reported abstinence or 100% condom use during the month prior to incarceration. In the month prior to the 10-week survey, during which they received PCM, significantly more of the same participants (n=30) reported abstinence or 100% condom use (P < .01). Nine participants reported not using drugs during sexual intercourse prior to incarceration. Twice as many (n=19) reported not combining drugs and sexual intercourse in the month during which they received PCM (P < .05). Similarly, compared with when they were first asked, participants reported fewer sex partners and less frequent use of alcohol during sexual intercourse at the second assessment, although these differences were not statistically significant.
Assessing Services Received and Service Outcomes
We assessed service delivery by asking case managers to fill out a report if and when participants (1) completed the 3-month transitional service period, (2) stopped receiving services because they were lost to follow-up, or (3) returned to jail or prison. Case managers completed reports of service outcomes for 119 of the 127 participants enrolled in the evaluation.
Most participants needed and received multiple services (see second sidebar). About half of the participants (n=65) successfully completed the program. About one quarter (n=31) were lost to follow-up at some point during the program, most often during the first 48 hours or after 4 weeks or more of program participation. Twenty-three of the participants who were not lost to follow-up were reincarcerated; 2 returned to prison, 8 to jail, and 13 to both jail and prison.
With regard to service outcomes (Table 1
), receiving comprehensive health services (medical, dental, and mental health) was independently associated with program completion (odds ratio [OR]=8.45; 95% confidence interval [CI] =2.36, 30.21; P =.001). In a multivariate model including client characteristics, this relationship was sustained. Although we suspected that housing was important to successful transition and we did find that participants who were not reincarcerated were more likely to have successfully secured housing (85.2% vs 73.9%, respectively, of those who were reincarcerated), receipt of individual servicesincluding housingdid not significantly predict program success.
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While we did not systematically collect qualitative data on this topic, case managers have made observations about key components of a successful transitional plan (see third sidebar). Replication of programs like Get Connected should include attention to these factors. Participating in an intensive PCM program appears to facilitate healthy behavior among people making the transition from prison to the community.
SERVICES RECEIVED FROM GET CONNECTED
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CRITICAL SERVICES FOR ENSURING SUCCESSFUL TRANSITIONS: LESSONS LEARNED
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| Acknowledgments |
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Human Participant Protection
This study received approval from the Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects, Health and Human Services Agency, State of California.
| Footnotes |
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Contributors
J. Myers designed the evaluation with B. Zack, conducted data analysis, and led preparation of this report. B. Zack helped conceive of the intervention and evaluation components and helped write the report. K. Kramer and M. Gardner collaborated on the design of the intervention, consulted on the feasibility of the evaluation, and assisted in the interpretation of the findings and writing of the report. K. Kramer also helped design data collection instruments and supervised data collection. G. Rucobo and S. Costa-Taylor conducted PCM services, collected data, and assisted in the interpretation of the findings and writing of the report.
Accepted for publication April 14, 2005.
| References |
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2. Hammett TM, Harmon P, Maruschak LM. 19961997 Update: HIV/AIDS, STDs and TB in Correctional Facilities. Washington, DC: National Institute of Justice; 1999.
3. HIV in Prisons and Jails, 1997. Washington, DC: US Dept of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics; 1999.
4. Petersilia J. When Prisoners Come Home: Parole and Prisoner Reentry. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press; 2003.
5. Grinstead O, Zack B, Faigeles, Grossman N, Blea L. Reducing postrelease HIV risk among male prison inmates. Crim Justice Behav. 1999;26: 453465.
6. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. HIV prevention case managementguidance. September 1997. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/hivpcmg.htm. Accessed July 11, 2005.
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