Corrections_Today_Summer_2024_Vol.86_No.2
CORRECTIONAL CHAPLAIN PERSPECTIVES
13 Craig, Jessica M., et al. “A little early risk goes a long bad way: Adverse childhood experiences and life-course offending in the Cambridge study.” Journal of Criminal Justice 53 (2017): 34-45. 14 Reavis, James A., et al. “Adverse childhood experiences and adult criminality: how long must we live before we possess our own lives?.” The Permanente Journal 17.2 (2013): 44. 15 Testa, Alexander, et al. “Adverse childhood experiences and criminal justice contact in adulthood.” Academic pediatrics 22.6 (2022): 972-980. 16 Edalati, Hanie, et al. “Adverse childhood experiences and the risk of criminal justice involvement and victimization among homeless adults with mental illness.” Psychiatric services 68.12 (2017): 1288-1295. 17 Barnert, Elizabeth S., et al. “Parents’ Adverse and Positive Childhood Experiences and Offspring Involvement With the Criminal Legal System.” JAMA Network Open 6.10 (2023): e2339648-e2339648.
18 Bonnie, Richard J., and Clare Stroud. “Investing in the health and well-being of young adults.” (2017). 19 Khetarpal, Susheel K., et al. “Transition age youth mental health: addressing the gap with telemedicine.” Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health 16.1 (2022): 8. 20 Wilens, Timothy E., and Jerrold F. Rosenbaum. “Transitional aged youth: a new frontier in child and adolescent psychiatry.” (2013). 21 Durose, Matthew R., Alexia D. Cooper, and Howard N. Snyder. Recidivism of prisoners released in 30 states in 2005: Patterns from 2005 to 2010 . Vol. 28. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2014. 22 Chung, Winston W., and James J. Hudziak. “The transitional age brain:“the best of times and the worst of times”.” Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics 26.2 (2017): 157-175. 23 Los Angeles County Department of Health Services. Whole Person Care Los Angeles: Impact Report June 2022. Los Angeles, CA. (June)
Joyce Lee, MPH is a medical student at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. She completed her degrees in Biology and Sociology at Williams College, and finished her MPH at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount
Sinai. She is passionate about the health of historically marginalized populations.
Elizabeth Barnert, MD, MPH, MS is an Associate Professor of Pediatrics at The David Geffen School of Medicine
at UCLA. She provides pediatric care to youth detained in the juvenile legal system. She is also the author of Reunion: Finding the Disappeared Children of El Salvador.
Setting a NEW Standard in Jails! American Correctional Association
• Enhance professionalism • Improve conditions of confinement • Enhance operations • Improve public credibility • Increase morale
Accreditation: Excellence in Jails “The ACA accreditation process is a mechanism of checks and balances, and causes correctional systems to assess all facets of their organization. When we take a critical examination of our organizational processes, it offers an opportunity for internal oversight. Correctional systems can identify challenges, discover solutions and implement operational best practices which will significantly improve organizational efficiencies.”
–Tony Wilkes, Chief of Corrections, Davidson County Sheriff’s Office (TN)
American Correctional Association Standards and Accreditation Department
Phone: (800) 222-5646 Email: davidh@aca.org • Web: www.aca.org
Summer 2024 | Corrections Today
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