Mass incarceration, residential segregation and racial disparities in HIV
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Author/Creator
Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2016-12-31
Type of Work
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Citation of Original Publication
Henderson, Loren. "Mass incarceration, residential segregation and racial disparities in HIV." Journal of AIDS and HIV Research 8, no. 11 (2016): 150-162. https://doi.org/10.5897/JAHR2016.0387.
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Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Subjects
Abstract
Using a “mass incarceration” framework and county-level national data, this paper examines the
relationship between incarceration, ex-offender reentry locations, and HIV rates in counties with
different racial compositions. A series of “race-of-county” stratified regression models estimate HIV
prevalence rates with incarceration and ex-offender reentry locations when taking into consideration
residential segregation (that is, Black isolation and White isolation), region, high school graduation
rates, sex ratios, unemployment rates, median income, healthcare professional shortages, percentage
of residents without insurance, population density, and income inequality. As predicted, HIV rates are
higher in counties with high incarceration rates or with ex-offender reentry facilities. A race-of-county
stratified analysis, however, reveals nuanced patterns: In White counties and the highest-percentage
Black counties, HIV rates increase as incarceration rates increase. In integrated counties, they do not.
In the highest-percentage Black counties, the presence of reentry locations is associated with higher
rates of HIV, but this is not true in White and integrated counties. In integrated counties, higher levels of
Black isolation are associated with high HIV rates. In counties of all racial compositions, higher levels
of White isolation are associated with lower rates of HIV. Implications of these results are discussed.