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Health inequalities of 57,541 prisoners in Korea: a comparison with the general populationHealth inequalities of 57,541 prisoners in South Korea: a comparison with the general population

Other Titles
Health inequalities of 57,541 prisoners in South Korea: a comparison with the general population
Authors
Yoon, SeohyunJu, Young-SuYoon, JaehongKim, Ji-HwanChoi, BokyoungKim, Seung-Sup
Issue Date
6-5월-2021
Publisher
KOREAN SOC EPIDEMIOLOGY
Keywords
Correctional health; Prison health; Prison healthcare; Prison inmates; Korea
Citation
EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HEALTH, v.43, pp.1 - 6
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HEALTH
Volume
43
Start Page
1
End Page
6
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/128049
DOI
10.4178/epih.e2021033
ISSN
1225-3596
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to examine health disparities between prisoners and the general population in Korea. METHODS: We sought to estimate the prevalence of 17 physical and mental diseases using the nationwide medication prescription dataset among the total population of prisoners (n= 57,541) in Korea. Age- and sex- standardized prevalence ratios (SPRs) were estimated to compare the disease prevalence between the prisoners and the general population. The disease prevalence for the general population was calculated from the prescription dataset for a representative of the Korean population (n= 926,246) from the 2013 Korean National Health Insurance Service-National Sample Cohort. Furthermore, the prevalence of these diseases was compared between prisoners and a low-income segment of the general population (n= 159,781). RESULTS: Compared to the general population, prisoners had higher prevalence of almost all physical and mental diseases, including hyperlipidemia (SPR, 20.18; 95% confidence interval [CI], 19.43 to 20.94), pulmonary tuberculosis (SPR, 9.58; 95% CI, 7.91 to 11.50), diabetes (SPR, 6.13; 95% CI, 5.96 to 6.31), cancer (SPR, 2.36; 95% CI, 2.07 to 2.68), and depression (SPR, 46.73; 95% CI, 44.14 to 49.43). When compared with the low-income population segment, higher prevalence were still found among prisoners for most diseases, including pulmonary tuberculosis (SPR, 6.39; 95% CI, 5.27 to 7.67) and depression (SPR, 34.71; 95% CI, 32.79 to 36.72). CONCLUSIONS: We found that prisoners were more likely to be unhealthy than the general population, even in comparison with a low-income segment of the general population in Korea.
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