Keep Mentally Ill out of Solitary Confinement
Twelve years ago a federal judge called the practice of putting
mentally ill prisoners in solitary confinement the equivalent of
putting an asthmatic in a room with no air. Since then, lawsuits
against corrections departments in at least 10 states have obtained
court orders or settlements designed to keep the mentally ill out of
solitary.
For example, a settlement in April after five years of litigation
commits New York corrections officials to a number of concrete steps,
including creation of a new residential mental health unit, that should
dramatically decrease the number of prisoners with serious mental
illness locked round-the-clock in their cells. And Massachusetts may be
next: following the suicide of eleven prisoners in solitary in the last
two and a half years, seven of whom were mentally ill, the Disability
Law Center filed a lawsuit seeking an end to the solitary confinement
of mentally ill prisoners for more than a week and the construction of
a new secure treatment unit that would provide them with extensive
out-of-cell activities.
Life in solitary can be tough for anyone, but for the
mentally ill it can amount to torture. In solitary prisoners are locked
in small, claustrophobic cells 24 hours a day with no more than an hour
of exercise in a little barren cage outside the cell a few times a
week. Inmates can spend years with scant interaction with staff and
nothing to do, and both the isolation and idleness can exacerbate their
symptoms. The cruelty is compounded because mental health services for
segregated prisoners typically consist of little more than medication
and brief cell-front checks-ins by mental health staff.
Untreated or under-treated, the mentally ill may
deteriorate. They may rant and rave, babble incoherently or huddle
silently. They may talk to invisible friends and live in worlds
constructed of hallucinations. They may self-mutilate until their
bodies are riddled with scars. Many try suicide; some succeed.
Devastating as solitary may be for them, mentally ill
prisoners are disproportionately represented in segregation units,
punished and isolated for behavior that may be caused or heavily
influenced by their illness. Indeed, prisoners with mental illness are
less able than other prisoners to adjust to prison life. They are more
likely to break the rules through disruptive, belligerent, or
aggressive behavior. They are more likely to be victimized and more
likely to be injured in a fight. They may suddenly without warning
refuse to follow straightforward orders to come out of a cell, stand up
for the count or take a shower. They are more likely to behave in ways
that annoy, disgust and even enrage security staff who have scant
training in how to recognize, much less cope with, symptoms of mental
illness.
Men and women with serious mental illness may be ill
equipped for prison, yet their numbers behind bars are soaring.
Nationwide half of all prison inmates have a mental health problem,
according to a 2006 federal report. Thirty percent of prisoners are
estimated to have major depression and 15 percent may have a psychotic
disorder. Prisons house three times more people with serious mental
illness -- such as schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder -- than do
mental health hospitals.
There is something painfully awry when institutions set up
for punishment and control are asked to take care of the mentally ill.
The nation used to lock its mentally ill in asylums. Now it stows them
in prison.
Corrections officials can and should keep mentally ill
prisoners out of segregation. But they cannot keep the mentally ill out
of prison in the first place. That is a challenge for elected
officials,. They must reform crippled community mental health systems
that fail the poor and homeless, and they must reform unduly harsh laws
that send low level nonviolent offenders to prison. The mentally ill do
not have to end up in prison, but they will until public officials show
far more common sense and compassion than they have to date.
Jamie Fellner is director of the US Program at Human
Rights Watch and co-author of the report "Ill-Equipped: US Prisons and
Offenders with Mental Illness"