4409.0
State Prisons, Offenders with Mental Illness and Expedited Medicaid Restoration
State Prisons, Offenders with Mental Illness and Expedited Medicaid Restoration
Tuesday, November 5, 2013: 4:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Oral
Mentally ill persons involved in the criminal justice system represent a new frontier for community mental health and disability research. The scope of this problem is truly staggering with upwards of 86,000 persons with severe mental illness (SMI) released from state prisons each year with high rates of recidivism. The loss of Medicaid benefits by incarcerated offenders is thought to be a major obstacle to successful community reentry. Several states have adopted expedited restoration programs to reconnect eligible prisoners to their Medicaid benefits prior to release. It is widely believed that early benefit restoration can avoid disruptions in medication regimens and treatments for offenders with SMI when they are released to the community. However, few rigorous research studies have been conducted to establish the impact or cost-effectiveness of these policies. This presentation describes the rationale and design for the first statewide study of the effects of expedited Medicaid restoration programs in Connecticut and Washington state prisons on the community adjustment and recidivism of offenders with a severe mental illness. Administrative data from corrections, Medicaid, and public mental health authorities in each state were linked in a longitudinal case/control design (3 years pre-post EMR initiation) using propensity score matching techniques. Findings highlight the characteristics of participating offenders, use and costs of Medicaid-reimbursed services in the community, and subsequent criminal recidivism. Discussion will highlight Medicaid’s role in community re-entry for this vulnerable population.
Session Objectives: Identify the rationale and design for a comparative study of expedited Medicaid restoration programs in Connecticut and Washington intended to promote the reentry and community adjustment of prisoners with a severe mental illness.Identify the cost savings and impacts of expedited Medicaid restoration programs in Connecticut and Washington and the differential effects on mental health service use vs. reduced criminal justice involvements.
Moderator:
William H. Fisher, PhD
Organizer:
Joseph Morrissey, PhD
See individual abstracts for presenting author's disclosure statement and author's information.
Organized by: Mental Health
Endorsed by: Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drugs, Black Caucus of Health Workers
CE Credits: Medical (CME), Health Education (CHES), Nursing (CNE), Public Health (CPH) , Masters Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES)
See more of: Mental Health