Patient Care Access News

Past Incarceration a Key SDOH Causing Chronic Disease in Older Adults

Researchers found that past incarceration is an emerging social determinant of health (SDOH) that’s associated with a 20 percent to 80 percent increased risk of chronic disease.

This study adds to the growing information regarding past incarceration as a social determinant of health

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By Sarai Rodriguez

- Older patients with a history of incarceration are more likely to develop a chronic disease than those without prior incarceration, according to new research out of the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) underscoring incarceration as a social determinant of health (SDOH).

The incarcerated population has grown dramatically in the last 40 years, with nearly 2 million people in a United States prison or jail. That is a 400 percent increase between 1980 and 2020.

“The proportion of incarcerated older adults also rose precipitously,” lead study author Ilana R. Garcia-Grossman, MD, current VA fellow in the UCSF National Clinician Scholars, wrote in the study. “However, little is known about the health impacts of incarceration in later life or even the precise number of people in the US who have experienced incarceration during their lifetime.”