This story originally published online at N.C. Health News.ย 

At first, Tommy Green doesnโ€™t tell his clients that he was formerly incarcerated.

As a Community Health Worker forย North Carolina Formerly Incarcerated Transition Programย (NC FIT) in Orange County, he connects people coming out of jails and prisons with health resources, as well as assistance with other needs, like food and transportation.

When he first meets clients, he tells them about the program, but itโ€™s not until he says he also did time that he sees a spark in their eye.

โ€œThey look at me first like itโ€™s just a health care worker or a health care provider or somebody in the medical field,โ€ Green said, โ€œbut as soon as they know that Iโ€™ve been incarcerated, Iโ€™m looked at as a friend, become the big brother or uncle or father figure.โ€

There has been little funding directed at studying the process of reentering society after incarceration, saidย Evan Ashkin, professor of family medicine at the school of medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. However,ย research suggestsย that support from peers, people who have been through similar experiences, during reentry is beneficial for people leaving incarceration.

Ashkin, the founder of NC FIT, which connects formerly incarcerated people with health needs to health care services and other reentry resources, says employing community health workers, people with lived experience with incarceration, to help connect people to the right services is โ€œthe only reasonโ€ NC FIT works.

Reentering society after incarceration, whether it be after a week-long detainment at the local jail or over a decade in prison, can be a challengeโ€”especially since incarcerated people are frequently sicker than the general population, with higher rates of diseases such as diabetes orย hepatitis C.

Because of Greenโ€™s lived experience, he can meet clients where they are and establish a form of trust with them. They know he understands the complexities of reentry.ย 

While some reentry specialists without a history of incarceration might immediately point clients toward the job hunt, Green said he understands that sometimes returning citizens need to decompress and get their lives together before jumping into a job.

โ€œIf you got a job and youโ€™re not where you need to be mentally, then youโ€™re not gonna keep that job,โ€ Green said. โ€œItโ€™s not going to work.โ€ย 

Mental illness and incarceration are often intertwined.ย A 2014 report from the National Research Councilย found that 64 percent of jail detainees, 54 of state prisoners and 45 of federal prisoners reported mental health concerns.

โ€œWe incarcerate people for the crime of mental illness and the crime of substance use disorder,โ€ Ashkin said.

Despite the public health implications for people reentering society and the fact thatย 98 percent of people incarcerated in North Carolinaย will be released, many people reenter society feeling unsupported.ย 

In a recentย health policy brief inย Health Affairs, Ashkin made the case for more evidence-based reentry programming for formerly incarcerated people, such as medication-assisted treatment (MAT), an evidence-based approach for treating substance use disorders, and other approaches that focus on health and well-being.

A sicker population

Incarcerated people areย more likely to suffer from mental health issues. As much asย 85 percent ofย the prison population either has a substance use disorder or was arrested for crimes related to drug use. Often, these people are using substances to โ€œself-treatโ€ an underlying mental health disorder.ย 

Chronic physical health conditions, such as diabetes, and communicable diseases such as hepatitis C and HIVย are also more prevalent among incarcerated people.

David Rosen,ย assistant professor of medicine at UNCโ€™s medical school, said incarcerated people tend to be sicker due to a combination of things, from poverty to lack of health care.

โ€œThere is really just pervasive trauma among that population and with the trauma comes self-medication, and thatโ€™s an explanation for a lot of the substance use,โ€ Rosen said, โ€œAnd then with the substance use and with lack of access to care, people are more likely to engage in behaviors that might lead to hepatitis, HIV, STIs.โ€

Not to mention COVID-19โ€™s ongoing impact on carceral facilities and that being incarcerated in and of itselfย can be traumatizing.

Many formerly incarcerated people are not eligible for insurance, especially in states like North Carolina where Medicaid has not been expanded. Meanwhile, the state has been slow to adopt effective strategies such as medication-assisted treatment for incarcerated people with substance use disorder.

โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of very inefficient reentry strategies,โ€ Ashkin said.

MAT and reentering with substance use disorder

People with substance use disorder are oftenย forced into withdrawalย when they are incarcerated, instead of being given evidence-based MAT. When people with alcohol use disorder and substance use disorder are released from incarceration, they are often pointed to other abstinence-based resources, Ashkin said.

โ€œItโ€™s just wrong because we have effective treatments for opiate use, MOUD, medication for opiate use disorder,โ€ Ashkin said, โ€œWe know for the post release population,ย itโ€™s like 60ย toย 85 percent effectiveย at reducing overdose death, especially if we initiate people prior to release, and then continue in the community. And yet, itโ€™s very rarely done.โ€

MAT is an evidence-based practice for caring for people with opioid use disorder, according to theย Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, by using methadone, buprenorphine and naltrexone to treat the disorder. Butย whether a person on MAT will have access to their medication while incarcerated in North Carolinaโ€™s jails is hit-or-miss.

Medication that cuts opioid craving is often part of the rehabilitation process of people seeking recovery from substance use disorders.ย 

Some North Carolina jails, such as Buncombe County Detention Center, have launched effective MAT programs, while other jails force detainees with substance use disorder to go through forced withdrawal. This can be harmful, not just because withdrawal causes painful physical symptoms, but also because it can cause a person with substance use disorder to relapse, saidย Elisabeth Johnson, director of health services atย UNC Horizons, a program that helps women recover from substance use disorder.

โ€œEven if you have someone whoโ€™s stable on buprenorphine and then gets arrested, depending on the county theyโ€™re in, Iโ€™ve known women who have gone through detox while theyโ€™re pregnant because theyโ€™re in jail,โ€ Johnson said.

After leaving a prison or jail, people were 40 times more likely to die of an opioid overdose within two weeks after their release,ย according to a study conducted by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

โ€œThese people get incarcerated. And while theyโ€™re there, their tolerance goes down, and then they get out and think they can use the same amount of drugs that they used before they went in,โ€ and they accidentally overdose, Green said.

One of Greenโ€™s clients, who was forced into withdrawal in jail, died of an opioid overdose after she was released.โ€ย 

This problem has been exacerbated as opioid overdoses haveย soared throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and fentanyl, an opiate that is more addictive, has been introduced into North Carolinaโ€™s drug supply.

In response, NC FIT has partnered up with North Carolinaโ€™s prison system to introduce MAT while people are still incarcerated.ย COVID stalled the prisonsโ€™ pilot project to expand its MAT programย at N.C. Correctional Institution for Women (where the program is already in place for pregnant prisoners), Wake Correctional Center and Orange Correctional Center.

โ€œStaff training is underway at those facilities, and the expectation is to implement those initiatives at the end of this year or the beginning of next year,โ€ said John Bull, spokesperson for the North Carolina Department of Public Safety.

The COVID-19 pandemic has made reentry more complicated in other ways as well.

COVID complications

Itโ€™s no secret that COVID-19 pandemic ravaged carceral institutions, most of which donโ€™t have the physical space to allow safety measures like physical distancing, Ashkin said. North Carolinaโ€™s prisons and jailsย continue to report COVID-19 cases, even as the stateโ€™s most recent wave is receding.

The COVID-19 pandemic caused logistical problems for people reentering, from not being able to get a Social Security card to be able to work, or not being able to use technology to access telehealth services because they were incarcerated for a long time.

Medically vulnerable people were being released from prison due to the pandemic, but they often werenโ€™t connected with the medical resources they needed, Green said.ย 

โ€œThat was almost a pandemic in itself,โ€ Green said. โ€œYou had guys coming home scared to death because they didnโ€™t know what was going on. They didnโ€™t understand what a pandemic was. I think everybody understood how deadly it could be and that created more fear as well. And then also again, add on the factor of not being technology savvy.โ€

NC FIT established FIT Connect, which helped get medical records from people released early to connect them to federally qualified health centers to get the help they needed

People are continuing to come home from incarceration with COVID or having had COVID.

As we look forward to what life post-COVID could look like for people incarcerated and those reentering, Ashkin said there is still much we donโ€™t know about this disease, especially when it comes to the impacts ofย long COVID, a condition in which people continue to experience health problems four or more weeks after being infected with COVID-19.

โ€œBecause there are higher rates of COVID because of exposure, weโ€™re gonna see continued high rates of people post-release suffering complications, just like everybody does who gets COVID,โ€ Ashkin said.ย 

โ€œBut the caveat is poor access to care and uninsured, and exacerbating that problem in the poor communities of color that are most impacted by incarceration, where people return to, where we know there are more limited resources and harder to access medical care.โ€

Insurance after incarceration

Because Medicaid has not been expanded in North Carolina, many people reentering society after incarceration are either uninsured or uninsurable. Expansion would allow people up to 138 percent of the federal poverty guidelines to be eligible for Medicaid.

โ€œThere are many people who donโ€™t qualify,โ€ UNCโ€™s Rosen said. โ€œEven many people in the FIT program, who have chronic health conditions wonโ€™t necessarily qualify for Medicaid because they donโ€™t have a disability.โ€ย 

NC FIT has been able to help cover its clientsโ€™ costs with grant money, but it doesnโ€™t have the funds for specialists, Ashkin said. Even then, the program is not at the scale to care for every formerly incarcerated person returning to the community.

โ€œWe have 10 community health workers that can have 30 to 50 patients each,โ€ Ashkin said. โ€œIf you do the math, it doesnโ€™t even come close to serving the needs of the state.โ€

Even if NC FIT were able to scale itself to meet the greater need, the price of more expensive medical care for peoplesโ€™ chronic needs is โ€œinsurmountable,โ€ Ashkin said.

Medicaid expansion is not off the table yet in budget negotiations at the legislature. In addition, President Joe Bidenโ€™sย Build Back Better legislation includes a provision that would attempt to bridge the Medicaid โ€œcoverage gapโ€ in states that have not expanded Medicaid,ย such as North Carolina, by making those people eligible for tax credits to purchase a Marketplace insurance plan.

Ashkin said that even if that falls through, formerly incarcerated people need some kind of Medicaid funding for at least 12 months after incarceration.

โ€œPeople do get out, they get their diagnosis in the hospital of heart failure or prostate cancer or any disease, and they need to see a specialist, and again NC FIT cannot do that,โ€ Ashkin said. โ€œSo people are going without specialty care. Which is going to result in bad outcomes and again, drive up emergency room utilization and other avoidable costs.โ€


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