Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence

Background: Incarcerated women commonly report lifetime sexual violence victimization, have high rates of many physical and mental illnesses, and ultimately return to their communities with significant healthcare needs.Objective: This study qualitatively examined formerly incarcerated women sexual v...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:European Journal of Psychotraumatology
Main Authors: Mary Kathryn Allison, Marley F. Fradley, Whitney K. Norris, Melissa J. Zielinski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-12-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/20008066.2024.2447187
_version_ 1849321829761548288
author Mary Kathryn Allison
Marley F. Fradley
Whitney K. Norris
Melissa J. Zielinski
author_facet Mary Kathryn Allison
Marley F. Fradley
Whitney K. Norris
Melissa J. Zielinski
author_sort Mary Kathryn Allison
collection DOAJ
container_title European Journal of Psychotraumatology
description Background: Incarcerated women commonly report lifetime sexual violence victimization, have high rates of many physical and mental illnesses, and ultimately return to their communities with significant healthcare needs.Objective: This study qualitatively examined formerly incarcerated women sexual violence survivors’ health service utilization and perceived barriers to accessing health care – including primary care, mental health care, and substance use treatment services – three-to-five years post-release.Method: We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews and administered self-report surveys with 65 women.Results: Interviews revealed some barriers that were consistent across healthcare service type, including health insurance coverage, healthcare costs, competing obligations, care interruptions, and intrapersonal factors; other barriers were unique to service type. Although women reported barriers to primary care engagement, most still reported engagement. However, relatively few were attending any form of specialty mental health care – ongoing psychiatric care was especially uncommon – despite that many participants were experiencing mental and/or behavioural health concerns. Very few had received evidence-based trauma therapy and treatment for sexual violence victimization specifically was rarely mentioned. Participants reported significant barriers to accessing therapy, including interpersonal factors and competing obligations that interfere with appointment attendance.Conclusions: This study reveals the need for behavioural healthcare – including treatment for sexual violence victimization – and healthcare navigation resources in the years following incarceration, as well as the need for new models of mental health care management, to improve healthcare access for this underserved population.
format Article
id doaj-art-e2fa9f54b4b04b15bfd30f0c6f4b6537
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2000-8066
language English
publishDate 2025-12-01
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-e2fa9f54b4b04b15bfd30f0c6f4b65372025-09-02T10:06:20ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEuropean Journal of Psychotraumatology2000-80662025-12-0116110.1080/20008066.2024.2447187Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violenceMary Kathryn Allison0Marley F. Fradley1Whitney K. Norris2Melissa J. Zielinski3Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USAPsychiatric Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USAPsychiatric Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USAPsychiatric Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USABackground: Incarcerated women commonly report lifetime sexual violence victimization, have high rates of many physical and mental illnesses, and ultimately return to their communities with significant healthcare needs.Objective: This study qualitatively examined formerly incarcerated women sexual violence survivors’ health service utilization and perceived barriers to accessing health care – including primary care, mental health care, and substance use treatment services – three-to-five years post-release.Method: We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews and administered self-report surveys with 65 women.Results: Interviews revealed some barriers that were consistent across healthcare service type, including health insurance coverage, healthcare costs, competing obligations, care interruptions, and intrapersonal factors; other barriers were unique to service type. Although women reported barriers to primary care engagement, most still reported engagement. However, relatively few were attending any form of specialty mental health care – ongoing psychiatric care was especially uncommon – despite that many participants were experiencing mental and/or behavioural health concerns. Very few had received evidence-based trauma therapy and treatment for sexual violence victimization specifically was rarely mentioned. Participants reported significant barriers to accessing therapy, including interpersonal factors and competing obligations that interfere with appointment attendance.Conclusions: This study reveals the need for behavioural healthcare – including treatment for sexual violence victimization – and healthcare navigation resources in the years following incarceration, as well as the need for new models of mental health care management, to improve healthcare access for this underserved population.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/20008066.2024.2447187Sexual violencehealthcare accesswomen’s healthprimary care accessincarcerationViolencia sexual
spellingShingle Mary Kathryn Allison
Marley F. Fradley
Whitney K. Norris
Melissa J. Zielinski
Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence
Sexual violence
healthcare access
women’s health
primary care access
incarceration
Violencia sexual
title Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence
title_full Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence
title_fullStr Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence
title_full_unstemmed Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence
title_short Health service needs, use, and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence
title_sort health service needs use and barriers among formerly incarcerated women survivors of sexual violence
topic Sexual violence
healthcare access
women’s health
primary care access
incarceration
Violencia sexual
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/20008066.2024.2447187
work_keys_str_mv AT marykathrynallison healthserviceneedsuseandbarriersamongformerlyincarceratedwomensurvivorsofsexualviolence
AT marleyffradley healthserviceneedsuseandbarriersamongformerlyincarceratedwomensurvivorsofsexualviolence
AT whitneyknorris healthserviceneedsuseandbarriersamongformerlyincarceratedwomensurvivorsofsexualviolence
AT melissajzielinski healthserviceneedsuseandbarriersamongformerlyincarceratedwomensurvivorsofsexualviolence