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Mentally Ill In Prisons

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The Cycling of Mentally Ill In And Out of Prisons

Introduction: First the mentally ill were abandoned to the streets to join the ranks of the homeless population and to our jails. The continuous withdrawal of mental health funding has become all too familiar throughout America. Jails and prisons across the nation have turned into default mental health facilities. A system that was originally designed for security and rehabilitation is now trapped with treating the mentally ill who have nowhere else to go and eventually end up being cycled in and out of prison. This never ending cycle has led to a very sad but true reality that America’s jails and prisons have become our new mental hospitals. Mental hospitals that cannot and do not provide …show more content…

Jails and prisons are overcrowded unpleasant environments which make it harder on mentally ill inmates causing behavioral problems, especially those not treated. Failing to provide treatment for mentally ill inmates is another problem they face. Leaving these inmates without treatment for extended periods in dangerous and can detrimental for the mentally inmates and those around them. Failing to provide treatment happens more frequently in county jails than prisons. Without treatment the mentally ill symptoms worsen and lead to them becoming victimized or even committing suicide. Furthermore, mentally ill inmates are victimized more often than other prisoner. In fact, “1 in 12 prisoners with a mental disorder reported at least one incident of sexual victimization by another inmate over a six-month period, compared with 1 in 33 male inmates without a mental disorder” (Ditton, 1999). This sad reality can ultimately lead to another problem mentally ill inmate’s face. Not surprising, suicide in prisons and jails occur frequently more among inmates who are mentally ill. A study of 154 suicides in California prison system reported that 73% had a history of mental treatment (Dittion, 1999). Placing the mentally ill in prisons and jails instead of mental hospital can eventually lead to this sad truth of mentally ill inmates taking their own lives. For one Harrisburg man, his schizophrenia went from manageable to beyond control after he was incarcerated. Diagnosed at the early age of twenty, Betty’s son was stable and taking his medications. However, his health took a turn for the worse; he was arrested for selling drugs and put into a state prison for three years. His mental health deteriorated drastically, as he cycled in and out of jail through most of his life as most mentally ill do, he became worse and worse each time. Betty recalls visiting her son in prison, his hair

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