RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Implications for Improving Oral Health Care Among Female Prisoners in Georgia's Correctional System JF American Dental Hygienists Association JO J Dent Hyg FD American Dental Hygienists Association SP 323 OP 327 VO 90 IS 5 A1 Henrie M. Treadwell A1 Starla H. Blanks A1 Carlos C. Mahaffey A1 Whitney C. Graves YR 2016 UL http://jdh.adha.org/content/90/5/323.abstract AB Georgia has the eighth-highest state rate of incarceration and fourth-highest number of prisoners in the country. Aside from receiving a dental examination at intake to assess oral health needs, there are no efforts to determine the barriers and determinants that contribute to the presenting oral health status of Georgia's state prisoners. Also, there is no prerelease planning to establish a health care home for prisoners being released back into the community to continue oral health care services in an effort to support successful reentry.This study assessed the barriers that impact N=98 female inmates' access to oral health care, prior to incarceration, within Georgia's prison system using a 21-item survey developed by a division of an academic institution and administered by the staff of a state department. Majority of the survey respondents reported that they do not have a regular dental provider (83%), lack insurance coverage (66%), and had their last dental visit more than a year ago because they did not have money for service or treatment (64%). The data collected from this study will be utilized to inform future project efforts to both reduce costs and increase access to oral health care for Georgia's uninsured and underinsured, and especially the incarcerated and reentry populations.