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Prison Mental Health Services: Results of a National Survey of Standards, Resources, Administrative Structure, and Litigation
Metzner, JL Clinical associate professor of psychiatry, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO.
Fryer Jr, GE Coordinator for research and evaluation, C. Henry Kempe National Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect, Denver, CO.
Usery, D Researcher, Colorado Department of Corrections, Canon City, CO.
Abstract
The formation of adequate mental health systems within prisons has accelerated as a result of successful class action lawsuits. Our recent national survey questioned all state correctional departments about the existence of standards in each system, compliance with such standards, prevalence of class action lawsuits involving the issue of providing adequate mental health services for inmates, issues related to consent decrees, available mental health resources within the correctional system, and the administrative structure of the mental health system. Our purpose was to identify those factors correlated with certified class action lawsuits involving issues related to mental health services. Twenty-one states were involved in such litigation. Only the presence of psychiatric hospitals operated by the department of corrections correlated with the presence of certified class action lawsuits involving mental health services. Prison systems larger than 15 000 inmates were at higher risk for such litigation. Smaller systems having psychiatric hospitals run by the state mental health agency appeared to be at less risk for such litigation.
Keywords:
forensic science, jurisprudence, litigation, mental health services, poppy seeds, prisons, psychiatry
Paper ID: JFS352900433
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Author Metzner JL, Fryer GE, Jr, Usery D
Title Prison Mental Health Services: Results of a National Survey of Standards, Resources, Administrative Structure, and Litigation
Symposium ,
Committee on
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