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Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros
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Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System

Tina Riveros

Page 2: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Thousands of mentally ill are left untreated and unhelped until they have deteriorated so greatly that they wind up arrested and prosecuted for crimes they might never have committed had they been able to access therapy, medication and assisted living facilities in the community. Mental health professionals told Human Rights that it is next to impossible to get their clients admitted to hospitals or treatment programs until after they have deteriorated to such a point that they have already committed a crime.[1]

•[1] Human Rights Watch

Page 3: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Presentation Outline

• Introduction self and topic• Statistics• Mental Illness• Why prison? Purpose?• The truth about prison• Rehabilitation? How?• What can be done

Page 4: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Introduction

• Myself• My topic

Page 5: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Lets look at some statistics

• Around 60% of women in prison are parents, with 30-40% being sole carers. The majority of women in prison have some form of problematic relationship with drugs and/or alcohol and have been incarcerated for non-violent offences, and mostly drug-involved offences.

•Offenders with mental health needs (around 30%) and intellectual disabilities (around 12%) are much more likely to have their needs effectively met in the community environment. The experience of imprisonment, not surprisingly can often worsen existing mental health conditions. People with intellectual disabilities and people with a mental illness are especially vulnerable in the prison environment.

Page 6: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

• A report was made in 2003 regarding mental illness in prison.

• It was found that 45% of reception inmates and 38% of sentenced inmates had suffered a mental disorder in the past 12 months (characterised as a psychosis, affective disorder or anxiety disorder).

• When a broader definition of ‘any psychiatric disorder was used it was found that 74% was affected.

• The study also reported that female prisoners have a higher prevalence of psychiatric disorder with approximately 90% of female reception prisoners having experienced a mental disorder in the 12 months prior.[1]

•[1] Berry, C., Mental Illness in NSW Prisons, Health Policy and Advocacy, Public Interest Advocacy Centre page 2

Page 7: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

• 1995-2002 – 58% increase in imprisonment rate for women in Australia

The imprisonment rate is the number of prisoners on 30 June per 100,0000 estimated resident population at 30 June aged 17 and over

2002 – 1,484 women in prison

Page 8: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

• Of the roughly 15,000 people with major mental illnesses in Australian institutions in 2001 around one third were in prisons.[1]

• In New South Wales sixty-four per cent of offenders released from prison on parole re-offend within two years of release[2].

• In our prison system at the moment we have… 1.5 mental health workers for 3500 prisoners. Prisons have become the de facto psychiatric units but with not mental health professionals.[3]

Page 9: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Victorian Prisoner Health Study

74.9% of prisoners who had ever injected drugs reported injecting drugs while in prison.

Research last year, found that in the last decade in Victoria, there had been a 138% increase on prison expenditure, the equivalent increase for the state’s mental health services was only 88% .

• 36% of the prisoners who were surveyed had been told that they had a mental illness.

• 15% of the prisoners questioned reported that they were currently receiving medication

More than 30% of the prisoners questioned had attempted suicide.

Page 10: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

What is mental illness

The term mental illness is very broad. It covers a diverse range of health conditions relating to someone psychological state. Depression and schizophrenia are some of the better known examples of mental illness. Definitions are a little fluid. They have changed frequently over time and are influenced by various social and cultural trends. Bipolar Disorder

Page 11: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

SchizophreniaBorderline Personality DisorderDepressionAnxietyBipolar Disorder

Page 12: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

• The DSM describes a mental disorder is conceptualised as a clinically significant behavioural or psychological syndrome or pattern that occurs in an individual and is associated with present distress (e.g. a painful symptom) or disability (i.e. impairment in one or more important areas of functioning) or with a significantly increased risk f suffering death, pain, disability, or an important loss of freedom. In addition this syndrome or pattern must not be merely an acceptable or culturally sanctioned response to a particular event, for example the death of a loved one. Whatever its original cause, it must currently be considered a manifestation of a behavioural, psychological or biological dysfunction in the individual.

Page 13: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Purpose of Punishment

There are five possible purposes to the punishment of criminals: 1.

1. Incapacitation: A felon in prison cannot commit crimes while imprisoned. An executed felon cannot commit a crime ever again.

2. Deterrence: The threat of punishment deters people from engaging in illegal acts.

3. Restitution: The felon is required to take some action to at least partially return the victim to the status quo ante.

4. Retribution: The felon harmed society; therefore society (or the direct victims) is entitled to inflict harm in return.

5. Rehabilitation: The punishment changes the felon in order to make him a better citizen afterwards. (The punishment can include mandatory vocational training, counseling, drug treatment, etc.)

Page 14: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Prison Myths

• Free food• Free accommodation• You get paid• Watch TV all the time• Get an education for

free

Page 15: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Scott’s Case

Page 16: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Prison Facts

•violence•rape•isolation•development of mental illnesses•suicide•inadequate responses to mental health issues

Page 17: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Rehabilitation – Biggest Myth

- Sexual violence- Availability of drugs- Seclusion

Page 18: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

What can be done?

Page 19: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

GENERAL MENTAL

HEALTH SERVICES

FORENSIC COMMUNITY

SERVICES

REHABILITATION

SERVICES

MEDIUM AND LOW

SECURITY FACILITIES

HIGH SECURITY FACILITY

Page 20: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

1. Improve community Mental Health Service.

2. Have a court liaison service.3. Court Assessment service Prison

based services – reception screening, O.P., inpatient units – acute and long stay, vulnerable prisoner units, suicide prevention teams.

4. Development of more effective institutions

Page 21: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

5. Separate services for the seriously personality disordered.

6. Hostel & supervised accommodation.

Page 22: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

We need more appropriate institutions…

• We don’t want High Security Perimeter 5.2m wall with anti-grappling fronds, electronic surveillance with movement detectors within 5m of wall.

• We don’t want isolation.

Page 23: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

Conflict between Care & Containment

• Design which minimises the wall’s visibility.

• Internal hospital environment.The building design is hospital not prison based. Patients not locked in room, (except short term seclusion). Views, open space, changing vegetation, domestic standard construction.

• Education and recreation blocks community standard.

• Therapeutic rather than Custodial culture.

Page 24: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

SECURITY

CUSTODIAL THERAPEUTIC

Observe (from office) Interact (in unit)

Reward conformity Reward engagement and initiative

Emphasise behaviour Emphasise psych adjustment

Oriented to immediate goals Oriented to long term goals ofof institutional functioning good social and interpersonal functioning in the community

Page 25: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

CUSTODIAL THERAPEUTIC

Unified approach and Multiple Professional only one approaches andperspective (authoritarian) perspectives (negotiated)

Physical structure Therapeutic interventionsconstrain behaviour & social expectations

constrain unwanted behaviour

Ultimate goal control Ultimate goal effective functioning without antisocial and self damaging behaviours.

Page 26: Mental Illness, Women and the Criminal Justice System Tina Riveros.

• Combining high, medium and low security in environment of rehabilitation gives patients and staff sense of progress.

• Prisoner patients – acutely ill, rapid response, regularly assessed for progress and monitored for prospect of gradual community involvement – once discharged must be more to the service

• Staff able to move between aspects of service.

• Presence of students.*Mullen, P., Developing Forensic Mental Health, Monash University