been articles that have been written to help advocate the appropriate care that this population needs.
been articles that have been written to help advocate the appropriate care that this population needs.
In the book, A place to Stand, by Jimmy Santiago Baca, Baca writes about prison and how being incarcerated can have impact on a person and their family. With the most beautiful, strong and poetic language, Baca tells us the story of all the people who faces difficult times in order to find their place in the world. Baca always felt like he had no place to stand in society because, all of his life he was put down by his family and friends. From the age of five Baca experienced his dad and uncles going in and out of jail from being addicted to alcohol. Baca knew he would eventually end up in jail sooner or later because that’s what he had experienced all of his life. Baca writes, “Whether I was approaching it or seeking escape from it, jail always defined in some way the measure of my life” (3). Baca felt that his life would always head in the wrong direction because of his family issues. Baca shows being in prison can cause a lot of emotional impact on a person’s life, as well as affect the community.…
An interesting fact that was documented in the article was that; The National Center of Institutions and Alternatives annual incarceration cost for an elderly inmate was at sixty-nine thousand dollars, compared with an average of twenty-two thousand for their younger counterparts (American Correctional Association, 2012). It continues to discuss that Maryland prisons have had over one thousand five hundred and forty-six emergency room admissions. Article one goes on to say society should release our elderly prisons and put them on parole that way we would not spend so much money on our prison system. Elders have needs that most prisons cannot provide. Article one concluding saying, medical parole could assist with reducing the cost associated with the elderly, and return to the community individuals who are at very low risk of recidivism (American Correctional Association,…
Anyone who watches television or even reads a newspaper has seen examples of the lack of justice in America. Our jails and prisons have become warehouses for criminals. Many who are repeat offenders or substance abusers. Are these people receiving the rehabilitation that they need to become an upstanding citizen? They are being released with no marketable skills for life on the outside. This can lead to many of the people returning the life of crime and thus, becoming one of the many repeat offenders. In many cases of substance abusers, they are released with not treatment for the addictions. Instead they are courts ordered to seek the treatment themselves.…
Should prisoners serving life sentences for first degree murder be eligible for a parole hearing after 15 years? They shouldn’t. Criminals who hold life sentences for murder, rape, and kidnapping should stay in a jail cell. Without even the slightest chance of getting out. To many factors fall into play and the subject can only run deeper and deeper. These convicts were brutal in the outside world, and after taking their first step in a penitentiary it only gets worse. Their mental state crumbles, eventually leaving them hard wired to live in a dangerous environment. Being prosecuted for such terrible crimes, doesn’t happen just once for these people, and American citizens do not want these fist degree murderers set free in their communities.…
There are many different trends that correctional facilities have used in the past and these trends have continued on to modern day. Many people may wonder if these trends are going to continue into the future or if these trends can be put to a stop. One trend that correctional facilities have used in the past and has carried on into the future was the lack of rehabilitation services that are offered to inmates. When inmates go to a correctional facility it is usually because of crime that the inmate has committed. There are many reasons why an inmate can be sent to a correctional facility, these reasons can be from drug abuse, committing murder, or something from the individual’s life-style that has triggered this behavior. Because of reasons such as the ones listed above, the inmate(s) should be allowed to get treatment or go through a rehabilitation program so that there is an understanding of where the problems first began. The purpose of rehabilitation is to educate…
Kids who commit serious crimes should not go scot-free. If society doesn't recognize them as adults until the age of 18, why do kids suddenly become responsible as an adult when they commit a crime? Children have as much business in a prison as they do a bar. Yet, twenty-three states have no minimum age. Two, Kansas and Vermont, can try 10 year old kids as adults.…
Mentally ill offenders are a growing population in the prison system and different actions are needed to treat, aid, and skillfully support these people. Today these offenders expenses in medical and special care escalate as well as people being trained to care for these individuals. Furthermore how do these offenders act inside the prisons once incarcerated and what characteristics are these offenders categorized…
prisons in the 1980's… to failure to account for the effects of the collapse of the state mental hospital system,” explaining that “beyond simple overcrowding…the perceived influx of former mental patients into the prison population presents special management needs that prisons are unable to meet and disrupts the programming of more normal offenders.” In other words, the deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill and the massive allocation of them among prisons and jails has not only worsened their sanity, as many experts suggest, but it has also affected the efficiency of the incarceration…
It is important that inmates are provided with these opportunities and that they are not exploited when doing so, for example unreasonable payment for challenging tasks or jobs assigned. The experience of prison as brutalizing and damaging is reflected in the percentage of self-inflicted deaths by prisoners. Doubling during 70s and doubling again in 80s (Shaw, 1992), it is an ongoing echo of the Prison Service’s inability to preserve prisoners’ safety (Cavadino and Dignan, 2007, p.213). In addition, the level of violence that inmates are familiar with at the hands of their fellow prisoners also reflects this. It is widely acknowledged that the majority of prisoners suffer from learning disabilities and poorer physical health than the general population. At least 70% of sentenced inmates suffer from two or more mental disorders (Cavadino and Dignan, 2007, p.197). These needs are not being met in prison, thus if rehabilitation is being considered then rearrangement is required to allow it to…
The prison system has to realize that even though prisoners have broken the law they do not deserve to be locked in a room against their own will. Prisoners should not lose the same human born rights every citizen has. Locking them in a room is not a positive way of punishment, it’s rather cruel and does more harm than good. The slow speed the state of New York is improving its solitary confinement is defective. The severely ill inmates who need specific attention should not be a part of the general jail population, instead those inmates need to learn how to behave in the outside world by not being surrounded by the polluted minds of a general jail…
One of the biggest problem facing the correctional is not the disease all but the population whit elderly offenders are, that the population is increasing and the prisons are not sure how to solve this problem. The most of the elderly have been in prison for most of their lives. And when they are in prison for most of their lives most of them don’t have family members to take care of them or they don’t have any type of education and they have a difficult time in the real world or most of them will end up homeless or death. Most of them come back again to prisons and keep repeating the same cycle…
Prisons are slowly but surely becoming America’s new Asylums. An estimated 450 million people nationwide suffer from mental or behavioral disorders. These disorders are pretty common within prison populations. This extremely high rate of mental disorders in prison is closely related to several factors: the misconception that all people with mental disorders are a danger to the public, the failure to promote treatment, care, and rehabilitation, and the lack of access to mental health services. Many of these disorders are present before prison however, mental health disorders can also be developed during imprisonment due to human rights violations.…
Research Question: Should mentally ill convicted offenders be incarcerated in jails and prisons or institutionalized in mental health treatment facilities?…
While prisons house a number a social outcast, misfits and some all around dangerous people, they face a number of problems as well. The prison agencies are taking steps to deal with health threats from acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The Justice Department reported that twenty-two thousand four hundred eighty state and federal inmates were infected with HIV (human immunodeficiency virus), the virus that causes AIDS. Another issue prisons are facing is dealing with geriatric offenders; the significant expansion of America’s retiree population has led to an increase in the number of elderly people who are behind bars. Mentally ill inmates make up another group with social needs; some are neurotic or have personality problems, which increase tensions in prison. Prisons provide a part of the answer to the question of crime control; they also face problems of their own.…
In 2013, around 2,220,300 adults were imprisoned according to the US Bureau of Justice Statistics. The amount of prisoners continues to grow as the years come. As the numbers grow, the amount of mentally ill individuals instituted in prisons grows as well. As much as 50% of the US prison population is diagnosed with some sort of mental illness (Long). Though they might be difficult to handle, the courts must maintain a balance of keeping the mentally ill properly treated while also ensuring the public’s safety.…