High risk of death for young people after release from prison

Young people just released from prison are up to 20 times more likely to face death than those in the community, a new study has found. Associate Professor Stuart Kinner from the University of Melbourne and Dr Kate van Dooren from the University of Queensland looked at approximately 42,000 records of people released from prison in Queensland between 1994 and 2007. They were followed up for up to 14 years and deaths were identified in the National Death Index.  "Between 1994 and 2008, we identified that 363 people died within a year of release from prison. We found that the risk of death for people leaving prison is four times that of people in the wider community", said Associate Professor Kinner. As expected because they are less likely to experience the effects of chronic disease, young ex-prisoners, those aged 18 to 25, were less likely than older ex-prisoners to die.  however, the increase in risk of death after prison was greatest for this group: around six times higher among young men, and more than 20 times higher for young women. Of those young people who died after release from prison, nearly all were preventable deaths due to drug-related causes or suicide.  "On any one day there are almost 30,000 adults in prisons in Australia, and up to 60,000 cycle through prisons each year.
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