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Journal of Correctional Health Care
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Vulnerable Populations, Prison, and Federal and State Medicaid Policies: Avoiding the Loss of a Right to Care

Leda M. Pérez, PhD

Collins Center for Public Policy, Miami, Florida, lperez{at}collinscenter.org

Marguerite J. Ro, DrPH

Asian Pacific Islander American Health Forum, San Francisco, California

Henrie M. Treadwell, PhD

Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia

Unknown numbers of incarcerated people are losing public benefits. Instead of suspending these until the prisoner or detainee is released into society, some states are simply terminating benefits upon incarceration. Although there is evidence to suggest that this policy is having negative consequences for those who are reentering society and on their communities and systems of care, the precise impact is not clear because a systematic monitoring of these actions is nonexistent. A more efficient system would (a) suspend benefits and automatically reinstate the same to those eligible upon release and (b) establish a monitoring mechanism that would provide an accurate accounting of how these benefits are being applied.

Key Words: inmates • releasees • Medicaid • health care systems • quality assurance

Journal of Correctional Health Care, Vol. 15, No. 2, 142-149 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1078345808330040


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