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  1. People involved in the justice system are at 2.5 times the risk of HIV infection compared to the general population, which is further complicated by substance abuse. The purpose of this study was to evaluate ...

    Authors: Stephanie A. Spohr, Sumihiro Suzuki, Brittany Marshall, Faye S. Taxman and Scott T. Walters
    Citation: Health & Justice 2016 4:2
  2. A number of studies reveal a strong linkage between SC use and avoiding positiveurine creens. Despite this work and given the high rates of criminal justice supervision among Black men in the U.S., little is k...

    Authors: Joseph B. Richardson, Christopher St. Vil, Eric Wish and Carnell Cooper
    Citation: Health & Justice 2016 4:1
  3. Re-entry community health workers (CHWs) are individuals who connect diverse community residents at risk for chronic health issues such as Hepatitis C virus and cardiovascular disease with post-prison healthca...

    Authors: Precious Bedell, John L. Wilson, Ann Marie White and Diane S. Morse
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:19
  4. This paper examines how family and social relations facilitate and inhibit adherence to antiretroviraltherapy (ART) for people living with HIV (PLH) who have underlying substance use disorders and are transiti...

    Authors: Julia Rozanova, Shan-Estelle Brown, Ambika Bhushan, Ruthanne Marcus and Frederick L. Altice
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:18
  5. There is limited research and research dissemination on the care of detained persons, often due to barriers to conducting research in correctional settings. Additionally, while concerns exist about the quality...

    Authors: Judith A. Savageau, Warren J. Ferguson and Laura Sefton
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:17
  6. Supervised consumption rooms or supervised injection facilities (SIFs) are venues that have reduced the risk of needle sharing and deaths caused by drug overdose among people who inject drugs (PWID). As a resu...

    Authors: Ehsan Jozaghi
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:16
  7. Prison entrants commonly have a history of problematic alcohol and other drug (AoD) use. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (Indigenous) Australians are vastly overrepresented in Australian prisons with an ...

    Authors: Michael F Doyle, Tony G Butler, Anthony Shakeshaft, Jill Guthrie, Jo Reekie and Peter W Schofield
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:15
  8. Increasing attention has focused on the emotional dysregulation that can result from adverse childhood experiences among those who commit sexually violent crimes. While studies confirm a relationship between c...

    Authors: Stephanie R Ramirez, Elizabeth L Jeglic and Cynthia Calkins
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:14
  9. Most women involved in the criminal justice system are not incarcerated, but rather on probation or parole. We examined the receipt of health services and social vulnerability among women on parole or probatio...

    Authors: Jennifer Lorvick, Megan L Comfort, Christopher P Krebs and Alex H Kral
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:13
  10. Therapeutic diversion courts seek to address justice-involved participantsā€™ underlying problems leading to their legal system involvement, including substance use disorder, psychiatric illness, and intimate pa...

    Authors: Diane S. Morse, Jennifer Silverstein, Katherine Thomas, Precious Bedel and Catherine Cerulli
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:12
  11. The prevalence of HIV among U.S. inmates is much greater than in the general population, creating public health concerns and cost issues for the criminal justice system. The HIV Services and Treatment Implemen...

    Authors: Holly Swan, Matthew L Hiller, Carmen E Albizu-Garcia, Michele Pich, Yvonne Patterson and Daniel J Oā€™Connell
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:11
  12. Numerous poor health outcomes have been documented in the worldā€™s large and growing population of prisoners and ex-prisoners. Repeat justice involvement and incarceration is normative for ex-prisoners in most ...

    Authors: Emma G Thomas, Matthew J Spittal, Faye S Taxman and Stuart A Kinner
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:10
  13. Despite the high rates of unintended and complicated pregnancy among women who have spent time in prison, little is known about their use of prescribed contraceptives post-prison release. We used a routinely-c...

    Authors: Georgina Sutherland, Megan Carroll, Nick Lennox and Stuart Kinner
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:8
  14. Social capital theory encapsulates multidisciplinary principles and is measured across numerous social entities. However, there is a paucity of literature exploring the benefits of social capital for sentenced...

    Authors: Lise Lafferty, Georgina M Chambers, Jill Guthrie and Tony Butler
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:7
  15. Individuals recently released from prison engage in risky behaviors that predispose them to contracting HIV. Women may be at increased risk in the immediate period post-release, given higher rates of poverty, ...

    Authors: Gefei A Zhu, Nathan Birnbaum, Amy Carroll-Scott, Linda Evans, Lynn E Fiellin and Emily A Wang
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:6
  16. In the growing field of implementation science, sustainability is a critical component of the implementation process of moving evidence-based treatments to regular practice. This paper is intended to extend ou...

    Authors: Christy A Visher, Yang Yang, Shannon G Mitchell, Yvonne Patterson, Holly Swan and Jennifer Pankow
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:5
  17. Incarceration rates for people with serious mental illnesses are higher than the general population. However, research has been limited in regards to patterns of incarcerations for patients treated in public m...

    Authors: Allyson Anderson, Silke von Esenwein, Anne Spaulding and Benjamin Druss
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:4
  18. Studies show that ex-prisoners often experience more health problems than the general population; unfortunately, these issues follow them upon their release from prison. As such, it is possible re-entry rates ...

    Authors: Danielle Wallace, John M Eason and Andrea M Lindsey
    Citation: Health & Justice 2015 3:3
  19. Based upon therapeutic justice principles, mental health courts use legal leverage to improve access and compliance to treatment for defendants who are mentally ill. Justice-involved women have a higher preval...

    Authors: Catherine L Kothari, Robert Butkiewicz, Emily R Williams, Caron Jacobson, Diane S Morse and Catherine Cerulli
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:12
  20. The criminal justice system (CJS), specifically prisons and jails, is ideally suited for uniform screening of psychiatric (PD) and substance use disorders (SUDs) among people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA), who ...

    Authors: Angela Di Paola, Frederick L Altice, Mary Lindsay Powell, Robert L Trestman and Sandra A Springer
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:11
  21. In 2009, New York reformed its ā€œRockefeller Drug Lawsā€, terminating mandatory imprisonment for many drug charges and expanding the availability of treatment alternatives to incarceration. The reforms occurred ...

    Authors: Robert Riggs, Jim Parsons, Qing Wei and Ernest Drucker
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:10
  22. Chronic behavioral health conditions, such as psychiatric and substance use disorders, affect at least half of all arrestees, with two-thirds suffering from at least one chronic medical disorder. These conditi...

    Authors: Maureen McDonnell, Laura Brookes and Arthur J Lurigio
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:9
  23. Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) risk and interpersonal violence are interconnected public health problems facing incarcerated women. Prison may provide an opportune time to conduct HIV prevention activities...

    Authors: Marlanea E Peabody, Adam Choung, Rochelle Rosen, Caroline Kuo, Wendee Wechsberg, Karen Fernandes, Caron Zlotnick and Jennifer Johnson
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:8
  24. Prisoners are a vulnerable population with higher rates of trauma than community populations. Social support is important for both inā€“prison adjustment and post-release community re-entry. Loneliness, a relate...

    Authors: Jennifer C Kao, Adam Chuong, Madhavi K Reddy, Robyn L Gobin, Caron Zlotnick and Jennifer E Johnson
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:7
  25. Healthcare discrimination based on race/ethnicity is associated with decreased healthcare access and utilization among racial/ethnic minority patients. Discrimination based on criminal record may also negative...

    Authors: Joseph W Frank, Emily A Wang, Marcella Nunez-Smith, Hedwig Lee and Megan Comfort
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:6
  26. The world prison population is growing at a rate well in excess of general population growth, with more than 10 million adults currently in custody around the world and around 30 million moving through prison ...

    Authors: Stuart A Kinner, Kate van Dooren, Frances M Boyle, Marie Longo and Nicholas Lennox
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:4
  27. The Organizational Process Improvement Intervention (OPII), conducted by the NIDA-funded Criminal Justice Drug Abuse Treatment Studies consortium of nine research centers, examined an organizational interventi...

    Authors: Michael S Shafer, Michael Prendergast, Gerald Melnick, Lynda A Stein and Wayne N Welsh
    Citation: Health & Justice 2014 2:1
  28. Persons held in correctional facilities are at high risk for HIV infection and their prevalence of HIV is substantially higher than in the general population. Thus, the need for proper surveillance and care of...

    Authors: Steven Belenko, Christy Visher, Michael Copenhaver, Matthew Hiller, Gerald Melnick, Daniel Oā€™Connell, Frank Pearson and Bennett Fletcher
    Citation: Health & Justice 2013 1:8
  29. Moving evidence-based practices (EBPs) from clinical research settings to real world work environments is challenging. Grounded in the work of Proctor and colleagues on ā€œbench-trenchā€ partnerships, quality imp...

    Authors: Faye S Taxman and Danielle S Rudes
    Citation: Health & Justice 2013 1:7
  30. Substance use disorders are highly prevalent in community correctional populations, yet these settings frequently are ill-equipped to identify and refer offenders to community-based treatment services. In part...

    Authors: Peter D Friedmann, Lori J Ducharme, Wayne Welsh, Linda Frisman, Kevin Knight, Timothy Kinlock, Shannon Gwin Mitchell, Elizabeth Hall, Terry Urbine, Michael Gordon, Sami Abdel-Salam, Dan Oā€™Connell, Carmen Albizu-Garcia, Hannah Knudsen, Jamieson Duval, Juliane Fenster…
    Citation: Health & Justice 2013 1:6
  31. Despite a growing pipeline of effective clinical treatments, there remains a persistent research-to-practice gap in drug abuse services. Delivery of effective treatment services is especially lacking in the U....

    Authors: Lori J Ducharme, Redonna K Chandler and Tisha RA Wiley
    Citation: Health & Justice 2013 1:5

    The Erratum to this article has been published in Health & Justice 2014 2:3

  32. The primary aim of this paper is to explicate the mechanisms through which incarceration affects health. Guided by theories that emphasize the compounding nature of inequality and with a focus on those that ar...

    Authors: Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein
    Citation: Health & Justice 2013 1:3
  33. There is little data on the impact of prior criminal activity on the treatment of opioid dependence with office-based buprenorphine. The goal of this study was to investigate the association between prior crim...

    Authors: Elizabeth E Harris, Janet S Jacapraro and Darius A Rastegar
    Citation: Health and Justice 2013 1:2

Annual Journal Metrics

  • Citation Impact 2023
    Journal Impact Factor: 3.0
    5-year Journal Impact Factor: N/A
    Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP): 1.313
    SCImago Journal Rank (SJR): 0.813

    Speed 2023
    Submission to first editorial decision (median days): 14
    Submission to acceptance (median days): 210

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    Altmetric mentions: 946