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Inmate
Mental Health and Treatment: A BJS Report
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| Bureau
of Justice Statistics. (Fall 2006). "Inmate Mental Health and
Treatment: A BJS Report." Alaska Justice Forum 23(3):
2. More than half of all state prison and jail inmates in
the United States at midyear 2005 had a mental health problems, as
did almost half of federal prisons. By comparison, of American adults
aged 18 years or over in the general population, about 11 percent
are estimated to have mental health disorders. These and other findings
from the Bureau of Justice Statistics study "Mental Health Problems
of Prison and Jail Inmates" (NCJ 213600) are reported here. |
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Nationwide, more than half of all state prison and jail
inmates at midyear 2005 had a mental health problem, as did almost half
of federal prisoners, according to a report recently released by the Bureau
of Justice Statistics (Tables 1 and 2). These figures are noticeably higher
than those for the general U.S. adult population. According to data in
the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions, about
11 percent of those 18 or older in the U.S. are estimated to have mental
disorders. Female inmates—like females in the general population—had
higher rates of mental disorders than men. The mental health problems
also often occurred in conjunction with substance abuse or dependence
(Table 3). About a third of state prisoners had received treatment for
a mental disorder since admission; 24 percent of federal prisoners and
17 percent of jail inmates had received treatment (Table 4).
The findings of the BJS study were based on personal
interviews conducted with a national sample of inmates. The surveys collected
information on those experiences of inmates over the previous 12 months
that would indicate symptoms of major depression, mania or psychotic disorders.
The surveys did not evaluate the severity of the symptoms. Symptoms due
to medical illness, substance abuse or bereavement were not excluded from
reported results. Inmates in mental hospitals or those physically or mentally
unable to complete the personal surveys were excluded from the sample.
Mental health problems were defined by two
measures: symptoms as based on criteria specified in the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV); or a recent history of
problems indicated by a clinical diagnosis or treatment by a mental health
professional.
The preceding article is based on BJS
Special Report “Mental
Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates,” NCJ 213600.




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