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What Factors Contribute To Mass Incarceration

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As incarceration rates rise, health-related outcomes do as well. From 1970 to 2014, the U.S. prison population has risen 700% (Vera Institute of Justice) and by 2001, one in three Black men are sent to prison during their lifetime (Bonczar 5). Before disregarding prison health, it is important to first consider the implications on all of society. If we took better care of our prisoners, the entire U.S. population would be healthier. According to epidemiological studies conducted by the Population Studies Center, if the rate of U.S. incarceration in 1973 remained the same, there would be a 7.8% reduction in infant mortality by 2003 (Wildeman 2). 50% of all prisoners suffer from diagnosable mental illnesses (James and Glaze 1). Some of the most …show more content…

Society implemented policies like the Anti-drug Abuse Act of 1986 and Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 that targeted racial minorities, people with disabilities and those from low socioeconomic backgrounds. On an institutional level, health disparities continue to rise between the prison and general population because the private prison industry is focused solely on monetary gain. The cost of providing healthcare to prisoners diminishes profit. A lack of quality education and exorbitant high school dropout rates increase the likelihood of unemployment and criminal behavior leading to incarceration. Policy, privatization of prisons and education are upstream factors impacting incarceration and healthcare in prisons. Employment, income and criminal behavior are downstream factors. Prisoners aren’t being given resources or opportunities for rehabilitation. Instead, they are thrust back into the social inequalities that predisposed them to a life of drugs and crime. As people are disenfranchised from society, they are pushed to the margins of

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