Nearly one fifth of suicides in the United States occur in people who were incarcerated in the previous year, a new study showed.
An analysis of more than seven million recently incarcerated US adults revealed a nearly ninefold increased risk for suicide within 1 year after release and an almost sevenfold higher risk during the 2 years following release compared with nonincarcerated people.
The findings suggest that recent incarceration should be considered a risk factor for suicide, investigators said.
"Suicide prevention efforts should focus on people who have spent at least 1 night in jail in the past year," investigator Ted R. Miller, PhD, of the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Beltsville, Maryland, and Curtin University School of Public Health, Silver Spring, Maryland, and colleagues wrote. "Health systems could develop infrastructure to identify these high-risk adults and provide community-based suicide screening and prevention."
The study was published online on May 10, 2024, in JAMA Network Open.
To address the lack of data on suicide risk after recent incarceration, researchers used estimates from meta-analyses and jail census counts.
In 2019, a little more than seven million people (77% male), or 2.8% of the US adult population, were released from US jails at least once, typically after brief pretrial stays. Of those, 9121 died by suicide.
Compared with suicide risk in people who had never been incarcerated, risk was nearly nine times higher within 1 year of release (relative risk [RR], 8.95; 95% CI, 7.21-10.69) and nearly seven times higher during the second year after release (RR, 6.98; 95% CI, 4.21-9.76), researchers found.
Over a quarter (27%) of all adult suicides in the United States occurred in formerly incarcerated people within 2 years of jail release, and one fifth occurred within 1 year of release.
"The results suggest that better integration of suicide risk detection and prevention across health and criminal justice systems is critical to advancing population-level suicide-prevention efforts," the authors wrote.
High volumes of jail admissions and discharges, short jail stays, and understaffing limit the capacity of many jails to coordinate care with outside health agencies, researchers acknowledged.
"The suicide rate after the return to the community after jail stay is higher than the suicide rate in jail, but local jails have limited capacity to coordinate postrelease health activities," authors wrote. "Thus, a comprehensive approach to reducing the population-level US suicide rate would include health systems screening their subscribers or patients for recent arrest or police involvement and reaching out to those recently released to prevent suicide."
In an accompanying editorial, Stuart A. Kinner, PhD, and Rohan Borschmann, PhD, both with the Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia, noted that people who experience incarceration "are distinguished by complex health problems that necessitate coordinated, multisectoral care."
"Miller and colleagues' findings provide further evidence that incarceration serves as an important marker for disease vulnerability and risk," Kinner and Borschmann wrote. "Yet, all too often, the health care provided to these individuals before, during, and after incarceration is underresourced, interrupted, and fragmented."
Coordinating care for recently incarcerated individuals will require a coordinated effort by all stakeholders, including those in the criminal justice system, they argued.
"The systems that incarcerate 7.1 million people in the United States each year should not be given a get-out-of-jail-free card," they wrote.
This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH)/National Institutes of Health (NIH) and from the National Center for Health and Justice Integration for Suicide Prevention. Miller reported receiving grants from the NIMH/NIH with his employer as a subcontractor during the conduct of the study and a contract from government plaintiffs in Opioid Litigation: Epidemiology/Abatement Planning outside the submitted work. The other authors' disclosures are listed on the original paper. Kinner and Borschmann declared no relevant financial relationships.
Note: This article originally appeared on Medscape
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