From the reviews:
A comprehensive, provocative volume of articles edited by Robert Greifinger that explores correctional health interventions and their impact on greater public health. ... a multi-faceted, invaluable resource that should be required reading for anyone interested in correctional health. ... This book is suitable for a wide audience and is an indispensable reference for correctional health students, professionals, and scholars; criminal justice experts; and particularly for new practitioners in the field of correctional health. (Amy Nunn and Ank Nijhawan, Journal of Urban Health, Vol. 85 (3), 2008)
Public Health Behind Bars is a compilation of cross-disciplinary essays and reviews that illuminate the complexities of providing compassionate and competent medical care to inmates while maximizing public health. ... is more than a public health or medical textbook and will be compelling to a broad audience. ... The broad appeal of this book is greater because the contributors do not avoid controversial stances. ... Overall, I was struck by the authors' compassion for inmates throughout this book. (Ingrid A. Binswanger, New England Journal of Medicine, May, 2008)
This edited book focuses on medical, legal, and public health issues in the American correctional system. ... The book is intended for public policy practitioners, correctional administrators, correctional healthcare providers, inmate and patient advocates, lawyers, educators, students, public health practitioners, researchers, and community healthcare providers. ... an excellent sourcebook for a graduate seminar in public health and corrections. ... many opportunities for a professor to add thoughtful analysis, the book could easily be adopted in schools of public health or departments of criminal justice. (Paul J Goldstein, Doody's Review Service, September, 2008)
This collection of 30 chapters provides a comprehnsive examination of the interface between incarceration and public health. ... Greifinger has succeeded in bringing together a collection of essays that constitute a thorough examination of issues and programs generated by a court-prompted focus on the health of prison populations in the United States. Material from this book should be readily integrated into graduate programs in public health. Practitioners should find this text both insightful and pragmatic. (Keith J. Mueller, PhD, JAMA, November 5, 2008-Vol300, No. 17)