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The Impact of Segregation on the Mentally Ill. Tiffany Swift LCSW-C. Perpetuating cycle. Individuals suffering from a mental illness often struggle with the circumstances of incarceration. As a result, they may act out with dangerous, annoying or bizarre behaviors.
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The Impact of Segregation on the Mentally Ill Tiffany Swift LCSW-C
Perpetuating cycle • Individuals suffering from a mental illness often struggle with the circumstances of incarceration. • As a result, they may act out with dangerous, annoying or bizarre behaviors. • These behaviors are often misunderstood and viewed by authorities as disobedient or disruptive. Thus, authorities punish them as they would any other inmate. • When these punishments do not deter the behaviors, authorities may resort to placing the individual in segregation which will continue to perpetuate their illness and behaviors.
What is segregation? • Setting in which an inmate is confined in his or her cell for up to 23 hours each day • Utilized as a management tool • Disruptive behavior • Dangerous behavior • Predatory behavior
A day in segregation • In cell 23 hours per day (may vary by institution) • No visitations • Solitary recreation • No work • Eat meals alone in their cell • Restricted shower schedule • Restricted commissary options • Limited/no access to television, radio, telephone • Movement from cell only when escorted in shackles • Limited/no groups or programs • No privacy when meeting with medical or mental health staff • No social contact with other inmates except verbal through cell door • Restricted list of personal items
Disciplinary Diet With written request from administration, the disciplinary meat loaf recipe from Title 15 of the California Board of Corrections may be served. • 1 ¼ oz. dairy blend • 1 ¾ oz. raw grated potato • 1.5 oz. raw carrots, chopped • ¾ oz. tomato juice or puree • 2 ¼ oz. raw cabbage, chopped • 3.5 oz. ground turkey or re-hydrated Textured Vegetable Protein (TVP) • 1 ¼ fluid oz. oil • ¾ oz. wheat flour • 1/8 tsp. salt • ½ egg • 3 oz. dry red beans, precooked before baking (or 16 oz. canned or cooked red kidney beans) • 2 tsp. chili powder • 2 tsp. raw onion, chopped Shape into a loaf and bake at 350-375 degrees for 50-70 minutes (165 degrees internal temperature).
Disciplinary Diet (continued) • It is recommended that this diet be served twice in each 24 hour period, in place of the typical three meals per day. Each serving should consist of: one-half of the loaf, two slices of wheat bread, and at least one quart of drinking water. • This disciplinary diet should not be served to an inmate who’s receiving a prescribed medical diet without consulting a physician. • Disciplinary diet should not be used for more than a 72 hour period.
Who’s typically in segregation • Sexual predators • Gang affiliates • Drug dealers • Escapees • Aggressive individuals with mental illness • Anyone who poses a threat to the safety of staff and/or other inmates
Psychological effects of segregation • Anxiety • Depression • Anger • Cognitive disturbances • Perceptual distortions • Obsessive thoughts • Paranoia • Psychosis • Sleep disturbances • Impulse control • Impaired ability to think, concentrate or remember • Suicides occur disproportionately more often than in general population
Variations • Solitary confinement can lead to severe psychological trauma in individuals without a prior psychiatric disorder. • Some individuals tolerate segregation better than others, depending on personal traits, situational factors, and environmental conditions.
Mental health treatment in segregation • Psychiatric assessments • Routine follow ups • Medication management • Welfare checks (MSE) • Scheduled private sessions • Advocate for placement in special management units, more hours out, and a more stimulating environment • Multi-disciplinary team meetings • Prompt crisis intervention • Access to acute psychiatric hospitalization • Educate correctional staff members about the unique characteristics of this population • Implementation of Crisis Intervention Team
Resources • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/video/flv/generic.html?s=frol02p73&continuous=1 • Locking Down the Mentally Ill. (2010). Retrieved from http://www.thecrimereport.org/archive/locking-down-the-mentally-ill. • Mental Health Primary Care in Prison. http://www.prisonmentalhealth.org/page_view.asp?c=17&did=271&fc=012. • Metzner, J. L., & Fellner, J. (2010). Solitary confinement and mental illness in U.S. prisons: A challenge for medical ethics. The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 38(1). Retrieved from http://www.hrw.org/news/2010/03/22/solitary-confinement-and-mental-illness-us-prisons. • Scott, C. L., & Gerbasi, J. B. (2005). Handbook of correctional mental health. Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.