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  4. Assessing incarcerated women’s physical and mental health status and needs in a Swiss prison: a cross-sectional study
 
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Assessing incarcerated women’s physical and mental health status and needs in a Swiss prison: a cross-sectional study

Auteur(s)
Augsburger, Aurélie
Neri, Céline
Bodenmann, Patrick
Gravier, Bruno
Jaquier Erard, Véronique 
Chaire de droit pénal et de criminologie 
Clair, Carole
Date de parution
2022-2-22
In
Health & Justice
Vol.
8
No
10
De la page
1
A la page
16
Revu par les pairs
1
Résumé
Background. Women make up 5% of the European prison population on average. Almost invisible in prison and health research, and suffering the stigma associated with female offending, incarcerated women are often forgotten, and their specific healthcare needs remain much ignored. Combining face-to-face survey interviews and medical chart data, we aim to assess the health status, healthcare needs, and access to preventive medicine of women incarcerated in Switzerland.
Results. Sixty incarcerated adult women participated in a cross-sectional study to assess their life and incarceration histories, physical and mental health problems, medication, and use of medical services. Eligibility criteria were (a) an incarceration of at least four weeks and (b) the ability to provide written informed consent. Exclusion criteria were psychiatric instability and insufficient language competence.
Women’s average age was 34.3 years old (SD = 9.8); 45.0% of them were born in Switzerland, 33.3% in Europe and 15.0% on the African continent. Overall, 61.7% of women self-reported physical or mental health problems and 13.3% indicated they were once diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection. Further, 78.3% of women were active cigarette smokers; more than one in three women reported alcohol use problems and almost one in two women had used at least one illicit drug in the year before incarceration. Depression and perceived stress scores were above clinical cut-off points for more than half of interviewed women. When asked how they rated their health, 68.3% of women felt it had worsened since incarceration. All but four women had accessed prison medical services; however, our study does not indicate whether women’s use of healthcare was indeed adequate to their needs.
Conclusions. This study demonstrated incarcerated women’s poor health and health-risk behaviours. Structural changes and gender-responsive health promotion interventions have the potential to improve the health of incarcerated women and help them return to the community in better health.
Lié au projet
Répondre aux problèmes et besoins de santé des femmes incarcérées en Suisse: une étude pilote pour un défi en matière de santé publique 
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/30138
_
10.1186/s40352-022-00171-z
Autre version
https://healthandjusticejournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40352-022-00171-z
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: 2022-08-10_2170_9015.pdf (776 KB)
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