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Preventing The Worst By Mary Allison Mitchell

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Mary Allison Mitchell
English 2000
December 4th, 2014
“Preventing the Worst” Suicide is one of the most dominant causes of death among prisoners. Equipping prisons, prison employees, and implementing better programs to become more proactive in prevention will ultimately decrease the number of suicides among inmates. Suicide is the number one cause of deaths among local prisoners, and suicide is one of the top 5 causes of death in federal and state prisons (Noonan 2). Most prisoners begin their sentence at an unstable mental state. Because prisoners do not receive adequate attention for the severe mental anguish they face, many of them turn to the most permanent solution before they are given any help (Hayes 2). Prisons should become more proactive in prevention for three monumental reasons: to give prisoners a chance for future opportunities, to minimalize family grievances, and possibly eliminate the costs of solitary confinement. Most prisoners end their own lives before given the opportunity to create a future for themselves. Most suicides in jails occur within the prisoner’s first 24 hours of incarceration (World Health Organization 5). The daunting overall prison structure, overwhelming sense of guilt and embarrassment, and treatment prisoners first encounter leave prisoners feeling as if they have no option but to commit suicide. The World Health Organization describes inmates who commit suicide prior to their trial as “first time offenders who have been arrested

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