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Characterizing Aging-Related Health in Older Women with a History of Incarceration: Multimorbidity, Polypharmacy, Mortality, Frailty, and Depression

Journal of Aging and Health, Ahead of Print.
Older women with criminal legal system involvement (CLSI) face aging-related challenges to health earlier and with fewer resources than other women. Few studies focus on their health status and aging-related health needs.ObjectiveTo characterize aging-related health in women with past CLSI and compare with women with no-CLSI.MethodHealth and Retirement Study Wave 11 and 12 data from women age >50 with CLSI were compared with data from women age >50 with no-CLSI. Generalized linear models were estimated for aging-related health outcomes.ResultsThe group with CLSI (n = 230) was significantly younger than the no-CLSI group (n = 8035) yet had more physical, functional, and mental health challenges and fewer resources. Incarceration significantly predicted aging-related outcomes of multimorbidity, polypharmacy, mortality, frailty, and depression.DiscussionEarlier onset of physical and functional health conditions in women with past CLSI has implications for health education and promotion, clinical practice, and intervention design.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 02/27/2024 | Link to this post on IFP |
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