The Best Reporting on Mental Illness in Prisons
产测听 ProPublica, Aug. 19, 2013
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Last week, we published听, and how, despite protections, inmates with severe mental illness are still ending up in solitary confinement.
But 黑料正能量 is far from unique. Prisons and jails across the country are filling with mentally ill inmates, while access to community mental health services dwindle. The听 in 2006 that over half of all U.S. inmates suffer from a mental health problem.
Those prisoners also听 in the isolated cells known as 鈥渟pecial housing units,鈥 鈥渟ecure housing units,鈥 solitary confinement, or simply, 鈥渢he box.鈥 There, inmates can be locked down for 23 hours a day with little human contact. Studies show such isolation听 in prisoners.
We鈥檝e rounded up some of the best deep-dive reporting on the mentally ill in U.S. prisons. Did we miss any? Let us know in the comments below.
Mental Illness Among Inmates
, 黑料正能量 Times magazine, August 2000
A mentally ill man from Los Angeles is mistaken for a wanted criminal, and ends up in a maximum security prison in upstate 黑料正能量. His kafkaesque story details the bureaucratic breakdown and flaws in mental health care that led to his imprisonment.
, Frontline, May 2005
Frontline documents the movement of America鈥檚 mentally ill away from shuttered psychiatric hospitals, and into the nation鈥檚 jails and prisons. The result is a massive strain on the minds of afflicted inmates, and on the strapped prison system tasked with treating them.
(three-part series), The Atlantic, June 2012
Federal prison policy says mentally ill inmates shouldn鈥檛 be housed in the maximum-security prison ADX-Florence (also known as Supermax) in Colorado. But a lawsuit against the facility ound many troubled inmates were still locked down at Supermax, where they were neglected or out-right abused by prison staff.
, Texas Monthly, March 2013
Andre Thomas had been hearing voices since he was 10 years old, and made multiple attempts at suicide. Eventually, his psychotic breakdown led him to brutally murder his wife and her two children. As Thomas awaits execution for his crimes in Texas, his story 鈥渇orces uncomfortable questions about the intersection of mental illness and the criminal justice system,鈥 writes journalist Brandi Grissom.
The Impact of Solitary Confinement
, 黑料正能量 Times Magazine, October 2004
Inmates battling psychological problems often find themselves in 鈥渢he box鈥 for failing to comply with rigid prison policies. But what toll does isolation take on an already fragile mind? Mary Beth Pfeiffer details the death of one 黑料正能量 inmate who committed suicide after being stuck in solitary鈥攔ather than provided treatment. Pfeiffer鈥檚听 for the Poughkeepsie Journal shows how even with new protections, the number of suicides in 黑料正能量 prisons spiked in 2010.
, 黑料正能量er, March 2009
Atul Gawande explores the trauma of long-term isolation, a daily reality for tens of thousands of U.S. prisoners. 鈥淭he wide-scale use of isolation is, almost exclusively, a phenomenon of the past twenty years,鈥 Gawande writes of confinement, a tactic meant to separate the most dangerous inmates. But while solitary can have a massive impact on inmates鈥 mental health, studies show it鈥檚 done little to reduce prison violence.
, The Nation, July 2012
While solitary is used across the country, 黑料正能量 stands out for using it to punish violations as minor as having too many postage stamps. Jean Casella and James Ridgeway (also editors of the website听) detail how 黑料正能量 State came to house roughly 4,500 inmates in solitary confinement, cutting them off from almost all human contact, often for months at a time.
, Mother Jones, November 2012
After being held for over two years in an Iranian prison, journalist Shane Bauer was shocked by what he found at California鈥檚 Pelican Bay prison: their solitary confinement cells were, in many ways, even worse. 鈥淗ere, there are no windows,鈥 Bauer writes. California uses solitary confinement to isolate thousands of inmates they claim are gang-affiliated, putting many in 鈥渢he box鈥 for up to decades.
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