(Press-News.org) “Mistrust all in whom the impulse to punish is powerful,” warned Friedrich Nietzsche more than a century ago.
Instead, the impulse to punish appears to have grown more and more powerful in the U.S criminal justice system. Annually, more than 9 million people a year in the U.S. are arrested, and on any given day roughly 2.3 million are incarcerated, representing a 500% increase in the prison and jail population since 1980 (compared to a 46% increase in the population over the same time).
This level of incarceration has many consequences, including a direct impact on public and individual health. Contact with the criminal justice system has been associated with a number of poor health outcomes, including hypertension, depression and substance abuse disorders, as well as poor mental health, obesity and accelerated aging.
New findings published in the Journal of Criminal Justice now suggest that contact with the criminal justice system, particularly probation and probation in combination with incarceration, disproportionately affects the health outcomes of Black Americans.
“The argument that we make in the paper is that one — Black Americans are unequally or disproportionately exposed to criminal justice here in the U.S.,” explained Michael Niño, an assistant professor and corresponding author on the paper. “And two — when they are placed on probation, they have fewer economic and social resources to maintain all of the different responsibilities that are tied to probation.”
Niño and his co-authors in the Department of Sociology and Criminology at the U of A — Casey T. Harris, Alexia Angton and Meredith Zhang (now at Cal State LA) — made the case after winnowing through The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, more simply known as Add Health.
The Add Health study began in 1994 with a survey of 90,000 adolescents attending 132 schools about their health behaviors and contact with the criminal justice system. The initial group was then narrowed down to a pool of 20,000 representative students, who were reinterviewed periodically over the years, with the fifth and most recent time occurring between 2016 and 2019. The survey captured results on students who identified as Black, White or Hispanic.
Over the years, as adolescents settled into adulthood, the surveys charted the various ways respondents may have interacted with the criminal justice system, whether it was arrest, indictment, incarceration, probation or some combination of probation and incarceration (for instance, violating the terms of probation leading to incarceration).
From this data set, the researchers were able to make some very clear determinations: Black Americans consistently reported poorer health outcomes than their White and Hispanic counterparts when associated with contact with the criminal justice system. Moreover, probation proved to be the strongest driver of lower self-rated health and chronic conditions.
Why is probation so bad?
“It's incredibly stressful,” Niño said. “And that chronic stress of constantly having to think of how I'm going pay my probation fee, how I’m going to have to take urinalysis, I have to be here, I can't be here. And then also coupled with all of the other stressors that come with social life most certainly impact their health differently than it does other groups.”
He also emphasized that the majority of people under correctional control in the U.S. are on probation, but very little is actually known about the health consequences of it.
Moving forward, Nino and his colleagues will explore the long-term consequences of being exposed to different types of contact with the criminal justice system from early adolescence into adulthood. In particular, they hope to better understand what role race plays in that ongoing contact and how it impacts an individual’s health.
END
Study finds probation associated with poorer health for Black Americans
Contact with the criminal justice system – particularly probation – is associated with poorer self-rated health for Black Americans than for Hispanic or White Americans.
2023-09-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
University of Bath is home to UK’s first pilot plant for recycling plastic lab waste
2023-09-11
A company co-founded by a University of Bath graduate has opened the UK’s first pilot plant that can recycle up to 60% of plastic lab waste, to make back into new lab consumables. LabCycle hopes the technology could be scaled up in the future to recycle waste from healthcare, research and commercial labs that is currently incinerated or sent to landfill.
To avoid cross-contamination between experiments, most lab-based scientists use a significant amount of single-use plastic in their daily research, including pipette tips, test tubes, petri dishes and multi-well ...
Kessler Foundation scientists receive nearly $800,000 in federal grants to advance research in post-stroke neglect and autism
2023-09-11
East Hanover, NJ – September 11, 2023 – Three Kessler Foundation research scientists, Timothy Rich, PhD, OTR/L, and Co-Principal Investigators Helen Genova, PhD, and Heba Elsayed, MD, have been awarded $777,325 in federal grants by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to expand research in the fields of neglect dyslexia and autism. These studies may provide major steps towards finding innovative solutions for individuals affected by these conditions.
Dr. Rich, research scientist in the Center for Stroke Rehabilitation Research, was awarded $626,889 to conduct research on “Gaze, Head Rotation, and Neuroanatomic Correlates of Reading Errors in Neglect Dyslexia.” ...
The venom spider: New genus named after Tom Hardy’s Marvel character
2023-09-11
Tom Hardy and his Marvel character Venom have given their names to a newly discovered Australian spider. The genus Venomius and its only current species Venomius tomhardyi were described following an expedition to Tasmania.
Scientists MSc Giullia Rossi, Dr Pedro Castanheira and Dr Volker Framenau from Murdoch University (Perth, Australia) partnered with Dr Renner Baptista from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) to describe the new genus of orb-weaving spiders published in the open access journal Evolutionary Systematics.
Tom Hardy portrays Eddie Brock and his alter-ego Venom, an antihero closely associated with Spider-Man, across ...
Press registration now open for one of the world’s largest meetings in fluid dynamics
2023-09-11
More than 3,500 scientists from around the world will meet to present new research on the physics of fluids at the 76th annual meeting of the American Physical Society’s (APS) Division of Fluid Dynamics. The conference will be held in person only at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC, Nov. 19-21.
News media with valid APS press credentials may register for the meeting at no cost. To request press credentials, visit APS’s virtual press office. Registration will remain open throughout ...
New ionic materials boost hydrogen fuel cell efficiency!
2023-09-11
A team of researchers, affiliated with UNIST has made a groundbreaking advancement in improving the efficiency of hydrogen fuel cells, which are gaining significant attention as eco-friendly next-generation energy sources.
Led by Professor Myoung Soo Lah in the Department of Chemistry at UNIST, the team successfully developed solid electrolyte materials utilizing metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). This innovative approach significantly enhances the conductivity of hydrogen ions within the solid electrolyte employed in hydrogen fuel cells. Furthermore, the research team ...
Researchers a step closer to effective heparanase inhibitor
2023-09-11
The cellular protein heparanase plays an important role in allowing diseases, including viruses and cancers, to spread within our bodies. For this reason, researchers investigating a wide range of diseases are eager to find an effective heparanase inhibitor.
Scientists from the University of Illinois Chicago, along with colleagues at the University of Georgia and Utrecht University in the Netherlands, found a molecule effective at inhibiting heparanase activity related to the herpes simplex virus and reduced the spread of the virus when tested on human cells. The new research is published in Angewandte ...
FAU Harbor Branch researcher receives US patent for underwater imaging device
2023-09-11
Underwater imaging plays a critical role in many fields such as marine exploration, oceanographic engineering, environmental protection and identifying dangerous objects on the ocean floor. However, in turbid or turbulent waters, image quality is often severely degraded due to the complexities of the underwater environment and equipment limitations.
Underwater captured images often suffer from contrast loss because light is scattered and absorbed as it travels in water, resulting in major degradation of detail and distorted or blurred images.
A new invention about the size of a ...
AI can help write a message to a friend – but don’t do it
2023-09-11
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Using artificial intelligence applications to help craft a message to a friend is not a good idea – at least if your friend finds out about the use of AI, a new study suggests.
Researchers found that people in the study perceived that a fictional friend who used AI assistance to write them a message didn’t put forth as much effort as a friend who wrote a message themselves.
That perception may be understandable, but the effect goes beyond the message itself, said Bingjie Liu, lead author of the study and assistant professor of communication at The Ohio State University.
“After ...
Efficacy, tolerability of gefapixant for treatment of refractory or unexplained chronic cough
2023-09-11
About The Study: In this dose-response meta-analysis that included nine randomized clinical trials and 2,980 patients, compared with placebo, gefapixant (45 mg orally twice daily) led to modest improvements in cough frequency, cough severity, and cough-specific quality of life but increased taste-related adverse events.
Authors: Imran Satia, M.D., Ph.D., of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jama.2023.18035)
Editor’s Note: Please ...
Preschoolers show cultural differences in generosity, competitiveness
2023-09-11
RICHLAND, Wash. – In a set of sharing experiments, Spanish-speaking Latino preschoolers were more likely to choose options that would be more generous to others, even over a more equal sharing choice.
Their English-speaking peers in the Washington State University study more often chose the most competitive option, one that advantaged themselves over others. The most competitive among that group were English-speaking Latino children, a finding that the researchers believe may reflect their desire to transition ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
UNM physician tests drug that causes nerve tissue to emit light, enabling faster, safer surgery
New study identifies EMP1 as a key driver of pancreatic cancer progression and poor prognosis
XPR1 identified as a key regulator of ovarian cancer growth through autophagy and immune evasion
Flexible, eco-friendly electronic plastic for wearable tech, sensors
Can the Large Hadron Collider snap string theory?
Stuckeman professor’s new book explores ‘socially sustainable’ architecture
Synthetic DNA nanoparticles for gene therapy
New model to find treatments for an aggressive blood cancer
Special issue of Journal of Intensive Medicine analyzes non-invasive respiratory support
T cells take aim at Chikungunya virus
Gantangqing site in southwest China yields 300,000-year-old wooden tools
Forests can’t keep up: Adaptation will lag behind climate change
Sturgeon reintroduction initiative yields promising first-year survival rate
Study: Babies’ poor vision may help organize visual brain pathways
Research reveals Arctic region was permafrost-free when global temperatures were 4.5˚ C higher than today
Novel insights into chromophobe renal cell carcinoma biology and potential therapeutic strategies
A breakthrough in motor safety: AI-powered warning system enhances capability to uncover hidden winding faults
Research teases apart competing transcription organization models
Connect or reject: Extensive rewiring builds binocular vision in the brain
Benefits and risks: informal use of antibiotics to prevent sexually transmitted infections on the rise in key populations in the Netherlands
New molecular tool sheds light on how cancer cells repair telomeres
First large-scale stem cell bank enables worldwide studies on genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease
Hearing devices significantly improve social lives of those with hearing loss
CNIC scientists reveal how the cellular energy system evolved—and how this knowledge could improve the diagnosis of rare genetic diseases
AI sharpens pathologists' interpretation of tissue samples
Social outcomes among adults with hearing aids and cochlear implants
Passive smartphone sensors for detecting psychopathology
Ireland’s first BioBrillouin microscope will enable non-invasive assessment of living cells and tissues in real-time
Aligned stem cell sheets could improve regenerative therapies
Emergency department data show rise in hospitalizations due to pediatric clavicular fractures
[Press-News.org] Study finds probation associated with poorer health for Black AmericansContact with the criminal justice system – particularly probation – is associated with poorer self-rated health for Black Americans than for Hispanic or White Americans.