ACCJH Conference 2023

The Academic and Health Policy Conference on Correctional Health, hosted by ACCJH and supported by UMass Chan Medical School, is an annual peer-reviewed conference that highlights emerging research and policy across the justice field and supports the ACCJH mission to improve evidence-based practices and policies to improve the health of justice-involved populations. It is an interdisciplinary conference bringing together researchers, clinicians, public health experts and policymakers to meet this objective.

While the conference accepts proposed presentations or posters for consideration on any area of correctional justice health (see list of tracks below), we are interested in patterns, experiences and outcomes of health service utilization in justice-involved populations, including care provided during incarceration and both during and after community reentry. We welcome presentations on ways to effectively address the complex needs of justice-involved populations.

The two-day conference draws participants from more than 100 academic and correctional institutions around the world. Details about the conference, including hotel information and sponsorship opportunities are available on the conference website.

Tracks include:

  • Community reentry
  • Implementation Science and Clinical Translation
  • Juvenile Justice
  • Mental Health
  • Policy
  • Practice Redesign
  • Primary Care
  • Public Health
  • Racial and Social Justice
  • Research Methods/Approaches
  • Ethics of Clinical Practice and Research
  • Specific Populations
    • Disability
    • Geriatric/Aging Health
    • LGBTQ Health
    • Reproductive Heath
    • Veteran’s Health
  • Substance Use Disorders
  • Infections from Injection Drug Use (HIV, HCV)
  • Community-based participatory research
  • Clinical controversies on health care delivery behind bars

Participants will know and/or be able to:

  • Describe emerging health policy issues in correctional health and criminal justice.
  • Name three networking opportunities gleaned from the event to develop academic correctional health partnerships.
  • List solutions to barriers to research, designing applied research, and program evaluation.
  • Reflect on emerging health policy issues in criminal-legal health.

Conference Planning Committee Includes:

  • Warren J. Ferguson, MD, Professor of Family Medicine and Community Health
  • Ekaterina Pivovarova, PhD, Assistant Professor of Family Medicine and Community Health
  • Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein, PhD, Associate Professor, Duke Medical School
  • Alysse Wurcel, MD, MS, Associate Professor of Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine
  • Amy Jo Harzke, PhD, MPH, MDiv, Assistant Professor, University of Texas Medical Branch
  • Meaghan Dupuis, LMHC, Executive Director, Health and Criminal Justice Program, UMMS
The intended audience for this conference is researchers, clinicians, administrators, policy makers, grant funding leaders and community advocates.
Students


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Early Career Investigators

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Criminal Justice Practitioners

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Community Based Advocates

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Conference format will consist of various types of presentations over two days including:

  • 60-minute presentations: Intended to facilitate panels, policy presentations, or research skills training designed for audience engagement. Only a small number of 60-minute presentations will be accepted.
  • 30-minute presentations: Intended for extensive presentations which engage more audience input. Examples might include research methods presentations or completed research that will have policy and practice implications.
  • 15-minute presentation: Intended for a concise 13- minute presentation on completed research or research in progress with 2 minutes of Q&A
  • Poster Presentation: The poster format may be used for submissions of research results or other types of communications, e.g. policy, works in progress, research methods, practice transformation, etc.

Registration is now closed for the conference.

Registration Fees

  • ACCJH Members: $450
  • Non-Members: $550 (includes 1 year of ACCJH Individual Membership)
  • Students: $250 with membership only. Student membership to ACCJH is free. Register as a member to receive the discounted rate.

Registration Cancellation Policy:

Cancellations requested in writing on or before February 22, 2023, will receive a full tuition refund, less a $25 processing fee.

Cancellations requested in writing after February 22, 2023, will receive a 50% tuition refund.

There will be no refunds after March 8, 2021.

Please submit all cancelation requests via email to: accjh@umassmed.edu

Sponsoring Organizations:
Academic Consortium on Criminal Justice Health, a member organization owned and operated by the Justice and Health Equity Program, Commonwealth Medicine, UMass Chan Medical School and Department of Psychiatry, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School.

Accreditation Statement
The University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

CME Credit Designation Statement
The University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School designates this live activity for a maximum of 13 AMA PRA Category 1™ credits. Physicians should claim only credit commensurate with their extent of participation in the activity.

Conference Evaluation
In order to receive continuing education credits from the 16th Academic & Health Policy Conference on Correctional Health, attendees must fill out this conference application by May 12, 2023.

Nursing
This offering meets the requirements for 15.6 contact hours for nurses as specified by the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Nursing (244-CMR 5.04). Each nurse should claim only those hours of credit that he/she actually spent in the educational activity.

Psychology
The Department of Psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The University of Massachusetts Medical School maintains responsibility for the program and its content. This program is being offered for 10.25  continuing education credits (CE) for psychologists.

Certification
All those who sign in on each day attended and complete a course evaluation will receive a certificate of credit. Each person should claim only those hours of credit they spent in the activity.

CME Inquiries
For all CME certification inquiries, please contact the UMMS-OCME registrar at (508) 856-1671 or (877) 234-1673.

IMPORTANT: If you are applying for educational credits, completion of the online conference evaluation is mandatory and must be submitted no later than May 12, 2023. Failure to submit the evaluation by May 12, 2023, will result in forfeiture of educational credits. The conference evaluation will be available online at accjh.org. It will also be emailed to all attendees after the conference. If you have any questions about the online evaluation, please feel free to contact us at accjh@umassmed.edu.

Online Disclosure Form

2023 Keynote Announced!

ACCJH is thrilled to announce that the production team of the Emmy award winner for Outstanding Current Affairs Documentary Belly of the Beast will be our keynote panel.  See the full trailer here and join us for a screening of the film on Wednesday, April 12.

From Bellyofthebeastfilm.com: When an unlikely duo discovers a pattern of illegal sterilizations in women’s prisons, they wage a near-impossible battle against the Department of Corrections.  Filmed over seven years with extraordinary access and intimate accounts from currently and formerly incarcerated people, BELLY OF THE BEAST exposes modern-day eugenics and reproductive injustice in California prisons.

Erika Cohn, Angela Tucker, Cynthia Chandler, and Kelli Dillon will speak about catalyzing reform via film.

Belly of the Beast Film Poster
Click poster to download press kit
(warning: download is 20 MB).

The 16th annual conference is at the Raleigh Marriott Crabtree Valley in Raleigh NC.

The Raleigh Marriott Crabtree Valley is now sold out.  The Courtyard Raleigh Crabtree Valley is a hotel near the conference.  ACCJH does not have a reservation block at this hotel.  You may also look at other hotel options by visiting the Visit Raleigh tourism website.

While the conference schedule is jam-packed with interesting sessions and networking opportunities, you may want to explore the city a little while you are here. Raleigh has a great food scene, events, museums, and more. Follow #visitraleigh on Instagram and prepare for your trip.

VisitRaleigh.com

Food & Drink in Raleigh

24 Hours in Raleigh

We invite interested parties to sponsor the 16th annual Academic & Health Policy Conference on Correctional Health.  ACCJH is a member organization with a mission to advance the science and practice of health care for individuals and populations within the justice system. Many of our members are world-renowned institutions conducting pioneering research in the field and are making key investments to improve health care for justice-involved populations.

The Correctional Health Conference attracts hundreds of attendees every year from academe, public agencies, correctional institutions, community advocates, and the business community. Last year, we had over 400 attendees, and expect a similar number in 2023.

The below information outlines sponsorship benefits. Please contact accjh@umassmed.org for more information.

 

2022 ACCJH Sponsorships

ACCJH Hosts Successful 16th Conference on Correctional Health in April

MAY 5, 2023

The 16th Academic & Health Policy Conference on Correctional Health recently took place on April 13-14 in Raleigh, North Carolina. Hosted by the Academic Consortium on Criminal Justice Health (ACCJH) and supported by ForHealth Consulting™ at UMass Chan Medical School, the event highlights emerging research and policy across the justice field and brings together researchers, clinicians, public health experts, and policymakers. ACCJH aims to improve evidence-based practices and policies to advance the health of justice-involved populations. This interdisciplinary event highlights emerging research and policy across the justice field.

In all, 380 professionals from 35 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico attended the event, representing dozens of academic institutions. The conference hosted 140 academic presentations and posters.

The conference’s keynote panel presentation was “Belly of the Beast: Challenging Eugenics in Prisons Using Collaborative Cinema as an Effective Strategy to Expose Healthcare Injustices.” Three panelists spoke about their work and experiences in challenging the California Department of Corrections around healthcare injustices with incarcerated females. Attendees were given access to watch their acclaimed documentary as part of their keynote presentation.

The panel included:

  • Cynthia Chandler is an acclaimed attorney and change agent with demonstrated success tackling pressing social issues. Her innovations include launching the first organization advancing the rights of HIV+ women in prison, creating the compassionate release process allowing for release of terminally ill people in prison, and co-founding Justice Now and Critical Resistance, early prison abolitionist organizations.
  • Erika Cohn is a Peabody and Emmy Award-winning director/producer who Variety recognized as one of 2017’s top documentary filmmakers to watch and was featured in DOC NYC’s 2019 “40 Under 40.” Most recently, Erika completed “The Judge,” a Peabody Award-winning and Emmy-nominated film about the first woman judge appointed to the Middle East’s Shari’a courts, which premiered at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival and was broadcast on PBS’ 2018 Independent Lens series.
  • Kelli Dillon is the co-chairperson for the Empowerment Congress Southeast Neighborhood Council. She is a survivor of domestic/gang violence and an advocate for violence prevention and intervention programs. Kelli found herself incarcerated at the age of 19 and was sentenced to serve a 15-year sentence. While in the California Department of Corrections, she began her advocacy and community work assisting fellow inmates with counseling and social justice issues. In addition, Kelli is the founder and executive director of Back to the Basics, a community empowerment organization and outreach program.

Friday’s plenary speaker was Rebecca Shlafer, PhD, speaking about “Enhanced Perinatal Programs for People in Prison: A Little Serendipity and a Lot of Science.” Shlafer is an associate professor in the Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Health at the University of Minnesota, and her research focuses on promoting the health and well-being of children and families exposed to the criminal legal system.

ACCJH is administered by the Justice, Health & Equity program at ForHealth Consulting.  ACCJH is a member organization with a mission to advance the science and practice of health care for individuals and populations impacted by the justice system. Visit their website to learn more.

From left to right: Erika Cohn, Kelli Dillon, and Cynthia Chandler, keynote speakers from the film ‘Belly of the Beast

From left to right: Patti Onorato, MS, ANP, Deputy Executive Vice Chancellor for Operations; Warren J. Ferguson, MD, Professor and Senior Vice Chair of the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health and Director of Academic Programs, Health, and Criminal Justice Program at UMass Chan Medical School; Dyana Nickl, JD, Deputy Managing Director of Justice, Health, & Equity; Lisa Colombo, DNP, MHA, RN, Executive Vice Chancellor; and Meaghan Dupuis, LMHC, Executive Director of Justice, Health, & Equity.

The ForHealth Consulting at UMass Chan Medical School Justice, Health, & Equity Team with Patti Onorato, MS, ANP, Deputy Executive Vice Chancellor for Operations and Lisa Colombo, DNP, MHA, RN, Executive Vice Chancellor.

ACCJH Conference attendees listening to session.

ACCJH Conference attendees applauding plenary speaker.

Duke University Host Committee

ForHealth Consulting’s Justice, Health, & Equity (JHE) team and the UHealthSolutions team from the Federal Medical Center (FMC) in Butner, NC.

ForHealth Consulting’s Justice, Health, & Equity (JHE) team and the UHealthSolutions team from the Federal Medical Center (FMC) in Butner, NC.

 

Originally published on https://forhealthconsulting.umassmed.edu/news/