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Position Statement of AACP on Persons With Mental Illness Behind Bars

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Position Statement of AACP on Persons With Mental Illness Behind Bars The Problem: 1. There are a large number of individuals suffering from serious and persistent mental illness in jails and prisons, including a significant number with dual diagnosis (co-occurring mental illness and substance use disorder). Estimates of the prevalence of serious mental illness in this population range from 7 to 20 percent, meaning that there are between 140,000 and 400,000 individuals suffering from serious mental illness, with or without substance use disorder, behind bars. These figures do not include the significant number who suffer from other potentially disabling Axis I disorders such as serious anxiety disorders, including PTSD; non-psychotic mood disorders; impulse control disorders, often related to neurological deficits; cognitive impairment disorders; and affective dysregulation disorders; or the large number having substance use disorder as the only diagnosis. While scientific advances have made treatment of serious mental illness increasingly effective, society has failed to make access to mental health services a reality for a large segment of the population. Lack of access to effective community treatment means that many individuals remain untreated, and become incarcerated either as a direct result of symptomatic behavior or because psychiatric hospitalization is not available. In addition, the vastly increased use of incarceration as society’s primary response to drug abuse means that there has been a dramatic increase in individuals with a dual diagnosis of mental illness and substance use disorder behind bars. 2. Conditions in jails and prisons exacerbate mental illness. Confinement, overcrowding, and idleness due to lack of rehabilitation programs all increase the likelihood of decompensation. Because of vulnerability to other inmates, or inability to comply with regulations, mentally ill inmates are frequently housed in protective or punitive segregation, where the isolation and enforced idleness lead to further deterioration in their condition. Mentally ill inmates are disproportionately sent to "supermaximum security units", where isolation and sensory deprivation make decompensation the rule. It is not surprising that the rate of suicide in prisons is twice that in the general population. In jails the rate is 9 times higher. 3. At the same time that the number of incarcerated mentally ill and dually diagnosed individuals has increased dramatically, along with the average length of sentences, opportunities for treatment and rehabilitation have decreased. Correctional mental health services are, in


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