- Build upon national and international collaborations to enable a central role in internationally significant studies that identify effective (evidence-based) interventions for improving and maintaining the health of justice-involved populations.
- Build and strengthen collaborations with correctional services nationwide, to facilitate translation of our research into effective health policy and service delivery.
- Undertake research to explore how health, health risk behaviours, psychosocial adjustment and engagement with health services change and are impacted by contact with, and release from the criminal justice system; and explore the links between health, social integration and offending behaviour.
We undertake innovative, scientifically rigorous and policy-relevant research projects that employ a range of methodologies including prospective cohort designs, randomised controlled trials and record linkage to enhance the evidence base for justice health policy and practice.
Research led by former Burnet researcher, Associate Professor Stuart Kinner published in the Medical Journal of Australia estimated that the number of deaths in recently released prisoners in Australia is ten times higher than the total number of deaths in prison each year, highlighting the extreme vulnerability of this population on return to the community.
This research demonstrates the urgent need to establish a national system for routing monitoring of ex-prisoner mortality, and for the implementation of evidence-based programs to reduce mortality and improve health outcomes for this profoundly marginalised group.
Working
Group
Meet the working group. Together, we are translating research into better health, for all.