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1                                              Correctional and detention facilities are at high risk o
2 upport wider use and further study of XRB as correctional and reentry OUD treatment.
3 treatment, particularly within primary care, correctional, and substance use treatment settings.
4 ble results that are also easily conveyed to correctional authorities.
5 th chronic HCV was evaluated in 3 Australian correctional centers.
6  implementation research study done at three correctional complexes in South Africa (Johnannesburg an
7 e changes that mass incarceration wrought in correctional contexts and the potential impacts of these
8 al record review to assess the experience of correctional control among 200 English-speaking adult pa
9 at primary care clinicians should screen for correctional control as a prevalent social determinant o
10 million men and 1 million women are under US correctional control, be it jail, prison, probation, or
11 pared with participants without a history of correctional control, those with a personal history of i
12  immigrant/refugee clinics (2,409; 6.4%) and correctional/detention facilities (2,325; 6.1%) were the
13  has been limited research exploring how the correctional environment impacts nurse health and wellbe
14 lates obtained from inmates of 20 California correctional facilities (CCFs).
15                        In 2019, seven county correctional facilities (jails) in Massachusetts initiat
16      The number of older adults in long-term correctional facilities (prisons) has increased rapidly
17 ccus aureus (SA) infections have occurred in correctional facilities across the country.
18 he difficulties of investigating botulism in correctional facilities and lessons learned for future i
19 ularly sexual abuse, is a serious problem in correctional facilities and those suffering from mental
20 olved 1,644 C. jejuni infections at 11 state correctional facilities and was associated with consumpt
21 roximately 2 million people being held in US correctional facilities are experiencing an opioid use d
22                 Youths incarcerated in adult correctional facilities are exposed to a variety of adve
23 y 2 million individuals in state and federal correctional facilities are infected with hepatitis C vi
24  are incarcerated in prison or jail, most US correctional facilities discontinue their methadone trea
25 nfection risk among residents of Connecticut correctional facilities during periods of predominant Om
26                         People released from correctional facilities face multifactorial barriers to
27 r 10 million yearly; persons entering locked correctional facilities have high prevalence of sexually
28 vidually randomised controlled trial in five correctional facilities in Gauteng, South Africa.
29 iversal test-and-treat (UTT) intervention in correctional facilities in South Africa and Zambia, and
30 ld address, active military duty, persons in correctional facilities or long-term care.
31 g-soaked paper strips (hereafter, strips) in correctional facilities poses a major public health risk
32 itivity and specificity, the accuracy within correctional facilities remains unknown.
33 nd receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) in correctional facilities were enrolled before release and
34 ity settings, including day care centers and correctional facilities, and among sports teams, Native
35  violence and traumatic victimization inside correctional facilities, effective treatments for posttr
36 types, including outpatient medical offices, correctional facilities, emergency medical services, and
37 types, including outpatient medical offices, correctional facilities, emergency medical services, etc
38 lamydia infection among adolescents in youth correctional facilities, to evaluate the noninferiority
39 le the implementation of UTT at the included correctional facilities, we first strengthened on-site H
40 ecular features of Acinetobacter isolates in correctional facilities, which provides a baseline for m
41 than 11 million have been released from U.S. correctional facilities.
42 ns, little is known about these organisms in correctional facilities.
43  screening for Trichomonas in women entering correctional facilities.
44 and unique prevention and care conditions in correctional facilities; 2) identify knowledge gaps; and
45                    Incarceration in an adult correctional facility before the age of 18 years compare
46                    Incarceration in an adult correctional facility before the age of 18 years was ass
47 18-64 years) released from a Wisconsin state correctional facility between April 1, 2015, and June 30
48 ng April-July 2011, 3 inmates at a Louisiana correctional facility developed F. novicida bacteremia;
49 uggested that being incarcerated in an adult correctional facility may be associated with an increase
50 articipants were scanned on the grounds of a correctional facility using the Mind Research Network's
51 igated a C. pneumoniae outbreak at a federal correctional facility.
52  hepatitis B immunization in STD clinics and correctional health care programs.
53 mance data to enforce quality control within correctional health care systems.
54  via email invitation sent to attendees of a correctional health conference, purposeful sampling usin
55         The findings of this Review call the correctional, health, and research communities to act to
56 e., the Repository of Electronic Archives in Correctional Healthcare, or REACH, database), General Es
57 n eventually lead to further advancements in correctional healthcare.
58 d not reside in any type of institution (eg, correctional institutions, juvenile facilities, orphanag
59 ders, the state of Texas implemented a novel correctional managed health care program in 1994.
60 tional characteristics & job stress and U.S. correctional nurse wellbeing.
61 ctional nursing work environment and support correctional nurse wellbeing.
62 sing a convenience sampling method, 270 U.S. correctional nurses completed a cross-sectional online s
63                                              Correctional nurses experience unique job stress in thei
64 ss, and wellbeing levels in a sample of U.S. correctional nurses, while exploring socio-demographic c
65 tress in future interventions to improve the correctional nursing work environment and support correc
66  inmates and 28/87 (32.2%; 95% CI 23.3-42.6) correctional officers were seropositive for anti-Toxocar
67 or Toxocara spp. antibodies when compared to correctional officers, significantly associated with age
68       Results underscore the opportunity for correctional organizations to consider targeting job dem
69                                              Correctional populations have an elevated human immunode
70 ed, about two-thirds of which are focused on correctional populations in the USA.
71 o summarize articles related to HIV/AIDS and correctional populations that were published from Januar
72 ated rates of HIV, STIs, and hepatitis among correctional populations--often associated with injectio
73 factors impeding HIV-prevention efforts with correctional populations.
74 ally linked youth justice records with adult correctional records and national death records up to Ja
75 m July 1, 1993, to June 30, 2014, with adult correctional records and the National Death Index, for r
76 was ascertained from youth justice and adult correctional records, with individuals identified as Ind
77 ed with widely used measures supplemented by correctional records.
78 to discuss PrEP benefits, and trained Zambia Correctional Service health-care workers in PrEP managem
79  stakeholder engagement meetings with Zambia Correctional Service officials to discuss PrEP benefits,
80                                          The correctional setting may provide an opportunity to safel
81            UTT implementation is feasible in correctional settings, and can achieve levels of same-da
82 importance of aggressive syphilis control in correctional settings, even in the face of declining loc
83  which is an important cause of morbidity in correctional settings.
84 limit transmission of airborne infections in correctional settings.
85 tely high prevalences of these conditions in correctional settings.
86 this assistance universally available within correctional settings.
87 99; these 161 cases, from 56 hospitals and 2 correctional sites, constituted 28% of all MDRTB cases i
88 g community-standard occupational health for correctional staff during COVID-19 will protect prison r
89 ]) versus charge only; and those under adult correctional supervision in the community (aHR 1.9 [1.5-
90 ning prisoners and in post-release community correctional supervision.
91 ted to criminal legal or criminal justice or correctional system and 18 projects (0.0007%) that relat
92 rimarily designed for male offenders, the US correctional system is struggling to meet the specialize
93                                   Within the correctional system, systematic screening based on risk
94 oportionate cost for hepatitis C care on the correctional system.
95 orm quality-of-care monitoring standards for correctional systems and facilities, nor are there mecha
96 ator of unmet needs and health inequities in correctional systems.
97                                    Yet, many correctional workers lack basic protections.