Jason Schnittker - University of Pennsylvania

Systems of Care and Systems of Corrections: Spillover Effects from Incarceration to Health Care

    Date:  12/06/2012 (Thu)

    Time:  3:30pm- 5:00pm

    Location:  Seminar will be held on-site: Social Sciences 111

    Organizer:  Matt Bradshaw


Meeting Schedule: Login or email the organizer to schedule a meeting.

    All meetings will be held in the same location as the seminar unless otherwise noted.

   *** - All Meetings (unless otherwise noted) are in 213 Soc-Sci - ***

   10:00am - OPEN

   10:30am - OPEN

   11:00am - Daniel Belsky

   11:30am - Trenita Childers

   12:00pm - Lunch (Faculty Commons): Katherine King

    1:00pm - Meet w/ DuPRI Students: Poh Lin Tan, Marina Mileo Gorsuch

    1:45pm - Megan Reynolds

    2:15pm - Elizabeth Frankenberg

    2:45pm - Amar Hamoudi

    3:15pm - Seminar Prep (111 Soc-Sci)

    3:30pm - Seminar Presentation (3:30pm to 5:00pm)


    Additional Comments:  ABSTRACT: Incarceration research catalogues its direct negative impact on former inmates and their families, though the effects of punishment clearly spill over to affect broader economic and political institutions as well. To further expand the scope of incarceration research, this study examines spillover effects between state-level incarceration rates and the functioning of the U.S. health care system. Using a large individual-level data set matched to state-level data, we find that individuals residing in states with a larger number of former prison inmates have diminished access to care, less access to specialists, reduced physician trust, and less satisfaction with the care they receive, net of a variety of individual-level control variables. These spillover effects are deep in the sense that they affect even those least likely to be personally affected by incarceration, including the insured, those over 50, women, non-Hispanic whites, and those with incomes far exceeding the federal poverty threshold. These effects establish the intersection of systems of care and corrections, linked by financial and administrative mechanisms. These intersections lead to spillover effects of unusually wide breadth.