DOAJ Open Access 2018

Self-harm following release from incarceration: Patterns and measurement issues

Rohan Borschmann Jesse Young Stuart Kinner Matthew Spittal

Abstrak

Introduction Despite an elevated prevalence of self-harm in the incarcerated adult population, little is known about patterns of self-harm following release from prison. Objectives and Approach Baseline self-report interviews with 1315 adults immediately prior to release from prison in Queensland, Australia, combined with interrogation of linked health data from >3750 post-release emergency department presentations, >2000 ambulance attendances, and corrections data during periods of re-incarceration. Results Approximately 5% of all contacts with medical emergency services following release from prison resulted from self-harm. These were associated with being Indigenous, having a lifetime history of a mental disorder and having been identified by prison staff as being at risk of self-harm. Agreement between self-reported self-harm and medically-verified episodes of self-harm was poor. Conclusion/Implications Emergency services contacts resulting from self-harm following release from prison are common and represent an opportunity for tertiary intervention for self-harm. Our findings suggest that a self-reported history of self-harm should not be considered a reliable indicator of prior self-harm, or of future self-harm risk, in incarcerated adults.

Penulis (4)

R

Rohan Borschmann

J

Jesse Young

S

Stuart Kinner

M

Matthew Spittal

Format Sitasi

Borschmann, R., Young, J., Kinner, S., Spittal, M. (2018). Self-harm following release from incarceration: Patterns and measurement issues. https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v3i4.907

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2018
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.23889/ijpds.v3i4.907
Akses
Open Access ✓