Rates and causes of death after release from incarceration

Rates and causes of death after release from incarceration among 1 471 526 people in eight high-income and middle-income countries: an individual participant data meta-analysis (fulltekst)

Summary
Background


Formerly incarcerated people have exceptionally poor health profiles and are at increased risk of preventable mortality when compared with their general population peers. However, not enough is known about the epidemiology of mortality in this population—specifically the rates, causes, and timing of death in specific subgroups and regions—to inform the development of targeted, evidence-based responses. We aimed to document the incidence, timing, causes, and risk factors for mortality after release from incarceration.

Methods

We analysed linked administrative data from the multi-national Mortality After Release from Incarceration Consortium (MARIC) study. We examined mortality outcomes for 1 471 526 people released from incarceration in eight countries (Australia, Brazil, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, Scotland, Sweden, and the USA) from 1980 to 2018, across 10 534 441 person-years of follow-up (range 0–24 years per person). We combined data from 18 cohort studies using two-step individual participant data meta-analyses to estimate pooled all-cause and cause-specific crude mortality rates (CMRs) per 100 000 person-years, for specific time periods (first, daily from days 1–14; second, weekly from weeks 3–12; third, weeks 13–52 combined; fourth, weeks 53 and over combined; and fifth, total follow-up) after release, overall and stratified by age, sex, and region.

Findings

75 427 deaths were recorded. The all-cause CMR during the first week following release (1612 [95% CI 1048–2287]) was higher than during all other time periods (incidence rate ratio [IRR] compared with week 2: 1·5 [95% CI 1·2–1·8], I2=26·0%, weeks 3–4: 2·0 [1·5–2·6], I2=53·0%, and weeks 9–12: 2·2 [1·6–3·0], I2=70·5%). The highest cause-specific mortality rates during the first week were due to alcohol and other drug poisoning (CMR 657 [95% CI 332–1076]), suicide (135 [36–277]), and cardiovascular disease (71 [16–153]). We observed considerable variation in cause-specific CMRs over time since release and across regions. Pooled all-cause CMRs were similar between males (731 [95% CI 630–839]) and females (660 [560–767]) and were higher in older age groups.

Interpretation

The markedly elevated rate of death in the first week post-release underscores an urgent need for investment in evidence-based, coordinated transitional healthcare, including treatment for mental illness and substance use disorders to prevent post-release deaths due to suicide and overdose. Temporal variations in rates and causes of death highlight the need for routine monitoring of post-release mortality.

 

Citation

Rohan Borschmann, Claire Keen, Matthew J. Spittal, David Preen, Jane Pirkis, Sarah Larney, David L. Rosen, Lars Møller, Eamonn O'Moore, Jesse T. Young, Frederick L. Altice, Jason R. Andrews, Ingrid A. Binswanger, Anne Bukten, Tony Butler, Zheng Chang, Chuan-Yu Chen, Thomas Clausen, Peer B. Christensen, Gabriel J. Culbert, Ruth Cunningham, Louisa Degenhardt, Kate Dolan, Seena Fazel, Colin Fischbacher, Margaret Giles, Lesley Graham, Yen-Fang Huang, Florence Huber, Azar Karaminia, Paula King, Fiona G. Kouyoumdjian, Sungwoo Lim, Yiran E. Liu, Derrick Lopez, Akm Moniruzzaman, Jeffrey Morenoff, Lia N. Pizzicato, Scott K. Proescholdbell, Shabbar I. Ranapurwala, Jenny Shaw, Amanda Slaunwhite, Julian M. Somers, Anne C. Spaulding, Marianne R. Stavseth, Marc F. Stern, Kendra Telfer, Kendra Viner, Nadia Wang, Bin Zhao, Nanbo Zhu, Stuart A. Kinner, Stuart A Kinner. Rates and causes of death after release from incarceration among 1 471 526 people in eight high-income and middle-income countries: an individual participant data meta-analysis, The Lancet, 2024.

Publisert 12. apr. 2024 13:30 - Sist endret 12. apr. 2024 13:30