“Over the past 50 years [America has] gone from institutionalizing people with mental illnesses, often in subhuman conditions, [in state mental health hospitals] to incarcerating them at unprecedented and appalling rates—putting recovery out of reach for millions of Americans […] On any given day, between 300,000 and 400,000 people with mental illnesses are incarcerated in jails and prisons across the United States, and more than 500,000 people with mental illnesses are under correctional control in the community.”[1] Mental Health America (MHA) supports effective, accessible mental health treatment for all people who need it who are confined in adult or juvenile correctional facilities or under correctional control. People with mental health and substance use conditions also need an effective classification system to protect vulnerable prisoners and preserve their human rights.[2] Notwithstanding their loss of their liberty, prisoners with mental health and substance use conditions retain all other rights, and these must be zealously defended.
In the past decade, America has been locking up increasing numbers of individuals with mental health conditions.[3] MHA is both concerned by and opposed to the increasing use of criminal sanctions and incarceration, replacing the state mental hospitals with much more drastic curtailment of personal liberty and preclusion of community integration and community-based treatment.[4] Prisoners with mental health conditions are especially vulnerable to the difficult and sometimes deplorable conditions that prevail in jails, prisons, and other correctional facilities. Overcrowding often contributes to inadequacy of mental health services and to ineffective classification and separation of prisoner classes. It can both increase vulnerability and exacerbate mental illnesses. For these and other reasons, MHA supports maximum reasonable diversion.[5]
Placing prisoners with mental health conditions in institutions, especially correctional facilities, imposes special obligations on society. Jails, prisons and other correctional facilities have a duty to provide medical services, including mental health services, and to provide protection from harm. These services are basic human rights of every prisoner with a mental illness or an addictive disorder. Correctional facilities must exercise special vigilance in dealing with every prisoner with a mental illness or addictive disorder because his or her ability to assert these human rights may be impaired. MHA believes that correctional facilities should provide more than the minimum services that could be compelled as a matter of American constitutional law.[6]
In 2011, the United States Supreme Court decided Brown v. Plata,[7] and ordering California to release over 40,000 prisoners because the medical services—including mental health care—that the State provided did not reach the minimum level of care required under the Eighth Amendment. The Court highlighted in its opinion that prisoners in California with serious mental illness did not receive minimal, adequate care. “Because of a shortage of treatment beds, suicidal inmates may be held for prolonged periods in telephone-booth sized cages without toilets […] A psychiatric expert reported observing an inmate who had been held in such a cage for nearly 24 hours, standing in a pool of his own urine, unresponsive and nearly catatonic. Prison officials explained they had ‘no place to put him.’”[8] This decision is significant because it makes clear that if prison officials do not provide adequate mental health services to inmates, they risk facing similarly serious sanctions.
Additionally, the nation must acknowledge and address the forces that contribute to the disproportionately high involvement of persons from ethnic and racial minority communities in the criminal justice system. A system that continues to incarcerate so many people of color with inconsistent lengths of incarceration when compared to others is inherently unjust.
When prisoners in need of mental health treatment must be confined in correctional facilities, they are entitled to the following:
MHA and its affiliates should work to inform members of law enforcement and correctional groups, judges and attorneys, mental health professionals and advocates, prisoners and their families, the community and the media about the excessive number of persons with mental illnesses and addictive disorders in prisons and jails and the inherent difficulties involved in providing decent and humane care to such persons in these settings and should develop and advocate for effective strategies addressing these problems. MHA and its affiliates should work with prison reform groups to highlight the treatment and conditions of person with mental health conditions in prisons and jails and to ensure that everyone with a mental health condition receives decent and humane mental health services while incarcerated.
The Mental Health America Board of Directors approved this policy on March 7, 2015. It is reviewed as required by the Public Policy Committee.
Expiration: December 31, 2020
[1] “Ending an American Tragedy: Addressing the Needs of Justice-Involved People with Mental Illnesses and Co-Occurring Disorders,” by the National Leadership Forum on Behavioral Health/Criminal Justice Services (September, 2009).
[2] National Commission on Correctional Health Care, Standards for Mental Health Services in Correctional Facilities, Standards MH-E-02, MH-E-03, MH-E-04 (2008).
[3] “From the Asylum to the Prison: Rethinking the Incarceration Revolution,” Harcourt, B., 84 Texas Law Review 1751 (2006). See also “On the American Paradox of Laissez Faire and Mass Incarceration,” Harcourt, B. 125 Harv. L. Rev. F. 54, 67 (2012).
[4] “Ill-Equipped: U.S. Prisons and Offenders with Mental Illness,” Abramsky & Fellner, Human Rights Watch (2003). http://www.hrw.org/reports/2003/usa1003/
[5] MHA Position Statement Number 52, “In Support of Maximum Diversion of Persons with Serious Mental Illnesses from the Criminal Justice System” (2013).
[6] In Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97 (1976), the Supreme Court held that a prison was not liable under the United States Constitution for failing to provide adequate health care to an inmate unless the inmate could prove that the prison was “deliberately indifferent” to the inmate’s medical needs. This standard has been applied to the provision of mental health services in prisons and jails. Conn v. City of Reno, 658 F.3d 897 (9th Cir. 2011). MHA believes that this standard does not sufficiently protect the rights of inmates and that confinement in a correctional facility should not entail the loss of the basic right to non-negligent health care, including mental health care that meets ordinary standards of professional care.
[7] 131 S. Ct. 1910 (2011).
[8] Plata, 131 S. Ct. at 1924.
[9] National Commission on Correctional Health Care, Standards for Mental Health Services in Correctional Facilities, Standard MH-E-02 and MH-E-03 (2008). Id., Standard MH-E-04.
[10] National Commission on Correctional Health Care, Standards for Mental Health Services in Correctional Facilities, Standard MH-I-05 (2008).
[11] In Washington v. Harper, 494 U.S. 210 (1990), the Supreme Court held unanimously that a prisoner had a Constitutional right not to be medicated against his will unless, as a result of serious mental illness, the prisoner was dangerous to himself or others and the treatment was in the prisoner’s best interest. MHA shares the view expressed in Justice Stevens’s concurring opinion that prisoners should be afforded review of involuntary medication decisions by a judicial decision-maker or, at a minimum, by someone not employed by the prison.
[12] Washington v. Harper, 494 US 210 (1990).
[13] National Commission on Correctional Health Care, Standards for Mental Health Services in Correctional Facilities, Standard MH-D-02 (2008).
[14] MHA Position Statement Number 24, “Use of Restraint Techniques and Seclusion” (2011).
[15] “Commentary: Evolving Toward Equivalence in Correctional Mental Health Care—A View from the Maximum Security Trenches,” Vlach & Daniels, 35 J. Am. Acad. Psychiatry & Law. 436 (2007).
[16] Id., Standard MH-G-05.
[17] Id., Standard MH-G-04.
[18] “Mental Health Issues in Long-Term Solitary and ‘Supermax’ Confinement,” by Craig Haney, University of California, Santa Cruz. Published in Crime & Delinquency, Vol. 49, No. 1, pp.124-156 (2003); “Solitary Confinement and Mental Illness in U.S. Prisons: A Challenge for Medical Ethics”, Metzner & Fellner, 38 J. Amer. Acad. Psychiatry & Law 1 (2010).
[20] National Commission on Correctional Health Care, Standards for Mental Health Services in Correctional Facilities, Standards MH-D-05, MH-E-09, MH-G-01 through 06 (2008).
[21] Id., Standard MH-E-10.