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Wellness Curriculum

A Good Idea

Description

Incarcerated persons are more at-risk for health problems than non-incarcerated persons. Lack of adequate medical care prior to incarceration, combined with specific prison characteristics, places incarcerated people at higher risk for STDs, HIV, hepatitis C, and also aggravates chronic conditions such as hypertension and diabetes. The Wellness Curriculum, a collaborative project between the Orange County Health Department and the Orange County Corrections Department, helps to address the health needs of inmates by providing information and education that is useful to them not only while they are in prison but, even more, as they are released into the community.

Goal / Mission

The Wellness Curriculum was developed 1) to address the racial/ethnic disparities in health outcomes and 2) to fill the need for information that the inmates themselves expressed.

Results / Accomplishments

Currently, Orange County Jail has 3,334 inmates. In the six-month pilot, the project has successfully reached 355 inmates (over 10 percent of the inmate population).

About this Promising Practice

Organization(s)
Orange County Health Department
Primary Contact
Yolanda Martinez, Researcher/Evaluator
6101 Lake Ellenor Drive
Orlando, FL 32809
(407) 667-6253
yolanda_martinez@doh.state.fl.us
http://www.orchd.com/
Topics
Health / Health Care Access & Quality
Health / Other Conditions
Health / Immunizations & Infectious Diseases
Organization(s)
Orange County Health Department
Source
Yolanda Martinez, Researcher/Evaluator
Date of publication
2005
Location
Orange County, FL
For more details
Additional Audience
Inmates
Healthy Marin