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Published Online: 7 September 2023

Substance Use Disorders, Mental Illness, and Health Care Utilization Among Adults With Recent Criminal Legal Involvement

Abstract

Objective:

Individuals involved with the criminal legal system have higher rates of mental illness, addiction, and health care utilization. The authors examined whether substance use disorders and mental illness alone or in combination drive health care utilization among those with recent criminal legal involvement.

Methods:

This cross-sectional analysis used nationally representative data from U.S. adults with past-year criminal legal involvement (N=9,039) recorded in the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (2015–2019). Using adjusted negative binomial regression models, the authors estimated relative risks for health care utilization. Primary independent variable categories included neither substance use disorder nor mental illness, substance use disorder only, mental illness only, and both conditions. Health care utilization included emergency department (ED) visits and nights spent in inpatient care.

Results:

Relative to neither mental illness nor substance use disorder, mental illness alone was associated with significantly increased acute health care services use: for ED visits, incidence risk ratio (IRR)=1.43 (95% CI=1.18–1.75) and for inpatient stays, IRR=2.14 (95% CI=1.47–3.11). Having both conditions was associated with increased ED visits (IRR=1.62, 95% CI=1.38–1.91) and inpatient stays (IRR=4.16, 95% CI=2.98–5.82). Substance use disorder alone was associated only with higher risk for ED visits compared with neither condition (IRR=1.23, 95% CI=1.01–1.50).

Conclusions:

Mental illness with or without co-occurring substance use disorder is a strong driver of acute health care utilization after interaction with the criminal legal system. Interventions tailored to the unique needs of individuals with mental illness or substance use disorder are needed for those with recent criminal legal involvement.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 221 - 227
PubMed: 37674397

History

Received: 23 September 2022
Revision received: 10 July 2023
Accepted: 14 July 2023
Published online: 7 September 2023
Published in print: March 01, 2024

Keywords

  1. Mental illness
  2. Substance use disorder
  3. Criminal legal system
  4. Criminal justice
  5. Acute care
  6. Utilization patterns and review

Authors

Affiliations

Harini Shah
School of Medicine (Shah), Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine (Hawks, Walker, Egede), and Center for Advancing Population Science (Hawks, Walker, Egede), Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Laura Hawks, M.D., M.P.H.
School of Medicine (Shah), Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine (Hawks, Walker, Egede), and Center for Advancing Population Science (Hawks, Walker, Egede), Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Rebekah J. Walker, Ph.D.
School of Medicine (Shah), Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine (Hawks, Walker, Egede), and Center for Advancing Population Science (Hawks, Walker, Egede), Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Leonard E. Egede, M.D., M.S. [email protected]
School of Medicine (Shah), Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine (Hawks, Walker, Egede), and Center for Advancing Population Science (Hawks, Walker, Egede), Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Egede ([email protected]).

Competing Interests

The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Funding Information

This study was partially supported by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (awards K24 DK-093699, R01 DK-118038, and R01 DK-120861 to Dr. Egede and 1K23 DK-132505-01A1 to Dr. Hawks) and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (award R01 MD-013826 to Drs. Egede and Walker).

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