10 research outputs found
Residential Trajectory and HIV High-Risk Behaviors among Montréal Street Youth—A Reciprocal Relationship
The Association between Engaging in Romantic Relationships and Mexican Adolescent Substance Use Offers: Exploring Gender Differences
Lifespan and Intergenerational Promotive and Protective Factors Against the Transmission of Interpersonal Violence in Diverse Families
A Social Ecological Framework of Inmate Health: Implications for Black–White Health Disparities
Abstract
This review integrates and builds linkages among existing theoretical and empirical literature from across disciplines to further broaden our understanding of the relationship between inequality, imprisonment, and health for black men. The review examines the health impact of prisons through an ecological theoretical perspective to understand how factors at multiple levels of the social ecology interact with prisons to potentially contribute to deleterious health effects and the exacerbation of race/ethnic health disparities.
This review finds that there are documented health disparities between inmates and non-inmates, but the casual mechanisms explaining this relationship are not well-understood. Prisons may interact with other societal systems – such as the family (microsystem), education, and healthcare systems (meso/exosystems), and systems of racial oppression (macrosystem) – to influence individual and population health.
The review also finds that research needs to move the discussion of the race effects in health and crime/justice disparities beyond the mere documentation of such differences toward a better understanding of their causes and effects at the level of individuals, communities, and other social ecologies
