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Fact Sheet
CRIMINALIZATION OF AMERICANS WITH SEVERE MENTAL ILLNESSES
"We are literally drowning in
patients, running around trying to put our fingers in the bursting dikes, while hundreds
of men continue to deteriorate psychiatrically before our eyes into serious
psychoses
The crisis stems from recent changes in the mental health laws allowing
more mentally sick patients to be shifted away from the mental health department into the
department of corrections
"
---California prison psychiatrist
Nowhere in our society is the debacle of deinstitutionalization felt more than in our criminal justice system. Major cost-shifting by the states to the federal government following the advent of Medicare and Medicaid and the radical actions of civil libertarians in the name of "freedom" proceeded in rapid order, leading to the largest component of todays health crisis: The criminalization of Americans with severe psychiatric illnesses. In fact, Americas jails and prisons are now surrogate psychiatric hospitals for thousands of individuals with the severest brain diseases.
According to a 1999 Department of Justice report, at least 16 percent of the total jail and prison population, or nearly 300,000 people, have a serious mental illness more than four times the number in state mental hospitals.
The costs of such incarceration are enormous. According to the Department of Justice (1996 Source Book: Criminal Justice Statistics), it costs American taxpayers a staggering $15 billion per year to house individuals with psychiatric disorders in jails and prisons ($50,000 per person annually; 300,000 incarcerated individuals with mental illness).
Incarcerating individuals with severe psychiatric disorders costs twice as much as assertive community treatment programs some of the most effective plans to treat the severely ill. While some jails and prisons provide adequate psychiatric services to ill inmates, many do not. And, many corrections officers receive very little training in the special problems of caring for psychiatrically ill inmates.
Conversely, Assertive Community Treatment teams provide patients with the same individualized 24-hours-a-day services that are furnished in psychiatric wards of hospitals. The difference is that the ACT team travels to the patient in his or her chosen environment, essentially serving as a hospital without walls. On their own, continuous treatment teams such as ACT must be complemented by the use of conservatorships or outpatient community treatment orders to ensure individuals actually get the medications they need for recovery.
A 1992 study of American jails reported that a shocking 29 percent of the jails acknowledged holding ill individuals with no charges against them. These individuals were being held awaiting psychiatric evaluation, the availability of a hospital bed, or transportation to a psychiatric hospital. These jailings were done under state laws permitting emergency detentions of individuals suspected of being mentally ill and were especially common in rural states such as Kentucky, Mississippi, Alaska, Montana, Wyoming, and New Mexico.
This same study found that the vast majority of U.S. jails do not provide adequate
psychiatric services to inmates with serious brain disorders. More than one in five jails
have no access to mental health services of any kind. Corrections officers in 84 percent
of jails receive either no training or less than three hours training in the special
problems of people with severe mental illness.
In examining police arrest records, researchers often find a direct relationship between the persons brain disorder and the behavior that led to apprehension. For example, a woman with schizophrenia in New Mexico was arrested for assault when she entered a department store and began rearranging the shelves because she had a delusion that she worked there; when asked to leave, she struck a store manager and a police officer. People who suffer from paranoid schizophrenia are likely to be arrested for assault because they may mistakenly believe someone is following them or trying to hurt them and will strike out at that person.
"Mercy bookings" by police who are trying to protect people with the severest forms of psychiatric illnesses also are surprisingly common. This is especially true for women, who are easily victimized, even raped, on the streets.
Local businesses often exert pressure on the police to get rid of
"undesirables," including those suffering from untreated psychosis. This is
especially true in tourist towns such as New Orleans, where the police have a well-known
reputation for "cleaning the streets" by arresting all vagrants and homeless
persons.
People with severe mental illnesses also are sometimes jailed because their families
find it is the most expedient means of getting the person into needed treatment. As the
public psychiatric system in the United States has progressively deteriorated, it has
become common practice to give priority for psychiatric services to persons with criminal
charges pending against them. Thus, for a family seeking treatment for an ill family
member, having the person arrested may be the most effective way to accomplish their goal.
Suicide by inmates with schizophrenia or manic-depressive illness is relatively common. For example, data collected from New York State jails between 1977 and 1982 showed that half of all inmates who committed suicide had been previously hospitalized for treatment of a serious brain disorder.
For each successful suicide in jails, there are many others that are unsuccessful.
According to a chief psychiatrist in the Los Angeles County Jail, the ratio of failed
suicide attempts to deaths by people with untreated brain disorders is about 20 to 1.
Illogical thinking, delusions, auditory hallucinations, and severe mood swings often lead to bizarre behavior by individuals with severe brain disorders who are in jails and prisons. Such bizarre behavior is disquieting to other non-ill inmates who frequently react with violence against those with brain disorders, thereby making life in jail a brutal experience for them.
A serious form of assault that sometimes occurs behind bars is attempted or actual rape. All inmates in jails or prisons are at risk for such attacks, but inmates who are confused by their illness and less able to defend themselves are more vulnerable.
Another major problem for those with severe mental illnesses in jails and prisons is
exposure to infectious diseases and neglect of their medical problems. Tuberculosis, some
varieties, which are resistant to medications, spreads rapidly among the incarcerated.
AIDS and venereal diseases can be a consequence of rape. People who suffer from severe
brain diseases frequently cannot describe their physical symptoms to officials, and if
they are able to do so, they are often ignored. Either way, the results can be fatal.
For people with serious brain disorders, the effects of being in jail or prison are occasionally positive, but more often negative. Interestingly, many of those who claim that it was positive, do so because they found being incarcerated was the only way they could get psychiatric treatment.
Such cases are the exceptions, however jails and prisons usually exacerbate psychiatric symptoms, both because individuals with serious brain disorders are frequently placed in solitary confinement and because they often are not given the necessary medication to control their symptoms.
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