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Why do we place our most vulnerable prisoners in solitary?

Why Do We Place Our Most Vulnerable Prisoners in Solitary?

February 12, 2015 10:19:47 am

By Joseph Galanek

Last month, the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections announced that placing inmates with mental illness in solitary confinement will no longer be part of their management practices.  It was a response, in part, to a civil rights investigation by the Department of Justice (DOJ)  that found Pennsylvania inmates with mental illness were “in solitary confinement for months and sometimes years, with devastating consequences to their mental health.”

The 2014 DOJ  report  also indicated that inmates were “routinely confined to their cells for 23 hours a day; denied adequate mental health care; and subjected to punitive behavior modification plans, forced idleness and loneliness, unsettling noise and stench, harassment by correctional officers, and excessive use of full body restraints”.

An unforeseen consequence of the increasing use of solitary confinement is that large numbers of inmates with mental illness are placed in these units due to behavior stemming from psychiatric symptoms. Read the whole article here at The Crime Report

 

 

Promise of Health Care Reform Unrealized for Former Inmates

Promise of Health Care Reform Unrealized for Former Inmates

click for redirect to article in CaliforniaHealth Report

from correctionalnurse.net, a podcast worth your attention

May 2014 Correctional Healthcare News Round-Up (podcast)

This month’s news items include female inmate growth, shackling pregnant woman, dealing with summer heat, and housing issues.

Fox News attacks a provision of the (ACA) allowing inmates to access Medicaid

Fox News attacked a provision of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that allows certain inmates to be enrolled in Medicaid as “ridiculous and unfair to every taxpayer.” But according to health care and correctional experts, increasing access to health services reduces both the costs associated with incarceration and decreases inmates’ chances of being incarcerated again.

other countries evidence better outcomes with re-entry

Incarceration and Recidivism: Lessons from Abroad

The Making of a Prison Doctor

the making of a prison doctor, patience, prevention, and persistence.

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