Article

Access to services for mental ill-health and substance use among people released from prison in Scotland (RELEASE): Retrospective observational cohort study protocol

Details

Citation

Kjellgren R, Savinc J, Dougall N, Kurdi A, Leyland A, Tweed E, Watson J, Hunt K & Connell C (2025) Access to services for mental ill-health and substance use among people released from prison in Scotland (RELEASE): Retrospective observational cohort study protocol. International Journal of Population Data Science, 10 (1). https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v10i1.2971

Abstract
Introduction Mental health and substance use (MH/SU) problems are highly prevalent among the prison population. However, early and preventative post-imprisonment care appears to be insufficient to meet the MH/SU needs of people released. This is demonstrated by elevated rates of MH/SU-related emergency care and deaths attributable to alcohol, drugs and suicide. Studies examining post-imprisonment healthcare contacts across community, outpatient, inpatient and emergency services for MH/SU are required to address this issue. This protocol paper describes the outcome of data linkage and details our plans for data cleaning and analysis. Methods The RELEASE study will follow a retrospective observational cohort design. This is the first study using national individual-level linked administrative health and prison data from Scotland. We report the results of creating the cohort, and outline proposed methods for data preparation and analysis. Within the cohort, the exposed group comprises everyone released from prison in 2015, and the unexposed group consists of a random sample of the general population matched (1:5 ratio) on age, sex, postcode and postcode-derived index of multiple deprivation, and with no prison exposure in the preceding 5 years. Health data (community prescribing, outpatient visits, specialist substance use, psychiatric inpatient, general inpatient, out-of-hours general practice, 24-hour National Health Service [NHS] helpline, ambulance, and emergency services), deaths data, and prison data (admissions, releases, demographic data) were linked to the cohort using unique identifiers. Service contacts associated with MH/SU will be quantified and compared across the two groups using regression modelling, controlling for potential confounding variables, reimprisonment and deaths. Conclusion RELEASE is a comprehensive study with potential to inform post-imprisonment MH/SU service delivery, whilst the dataset holds significant potential for exploring other health conditions and outcomes. This research will allow for an unprecedented understanding of post-imprisonment service use patterns in Scotland, and RELEASE will make a significant public health contribution given the overrepresentation of people released in costly emergency care contact and death rates.

Journal
International Journal of Population Data Science: Volume 10, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersChief Scientist Office
Publication date31/10/2025
Publication date online31/10/2025
Date accepted by journal14/07/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37564
PublisherSwansea University
ISSN2399-4908

People (3)

Dr Catriona Connell

Dr Catriona Connell

Senior Research Fellow, Faculty of Social Sciences

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Dr Richard Kjellgren

Dr Richard Kjellgren

Research Fellow, Faculty of Social Sciences

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