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Assessing the Needs of Women Recently Released From Prison

NCJ Number
234834
Journal
Women & Criminal Justice Volume: 21 Issue: 2 Dated: April-June 2011 Pages: 100-122
Author(s)
Kathleen J. Bergseth; Katie Richardson Jens; Lindsay Bergeron-Vigesaa; Thomas D. McDonald
Date Published
April 2001
Length
22 pages
Annotation
This study provides information about the needs of recently incarcerated women.
Abstract
The growing number of females incarcerated in the United States suggests that greater importance needs to be placed on preparing practitioners and communities for their eventual release from prison. Female offenders present a unique set of needs, including greater mental health, substance abuse, and medical health problems than their male counterparts. Furthermore, women may possess unique needs at various points of their involvement with the criminal justice system (i.e., before, during, and following a period of incarceration). The current study examines the needs of female offenders while they are reentering the community from the perspective of community service providers who work directly with recently incarcerated women. Survey results reveal that community service providers identify needs in 7 domains. Prevalence and urgency measures provide unique profiles of the needs of female offenders, and respondent reports of the effectiveness of the existing community-based service sector lead to numerous implications and suggestions for future research. (Published Abstract)