Baillargeon Jacques, Binswanger Ingrid A, Penn Joseph V, Williams Brie A, Murray Owen J
Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health, University of Texas Medical Branch, 301 University Blvd., Galveston, TX 77555, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2009 Jan;166(1):103-9. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.08030416. Epub 2008 Dec 1.
A number of legal, social, and political factors over the past 40 years have led to the current epidemic of psychiatric disorders in the U.S. prison system. Although numerous investigations have reported substantially elevated rates of psychiatric disorders among prison inmates compared with the general population, it is unclear whether mental illness is a risk factor for multiple episodes of incarceration. The authors examined this association in a retrospective cohort study of the nation's largest state prison system.
The study population included 79,211 inmates who began serving a sentence between September 1, 2006, and August 31, 2007. Data on psychiatric disorders, demographic characteristics, and history of incarceration for the preceding 6-year period were obtained from statewide medical information systems and analyzed.
Inmates with major psychiatric disorders (major depressive disorder, bipolar disorders, schizophrenia, and nonschizophrenic psychotic disorders) had substantially increased risks of multiple incarcerations over the 6-year study period. The greatest increase in risk was observed among inmates with bipolar disorders, who were 3.3 times more likely to have had four or more previous incarcerations compared with inmates who had no major psychiatric disorder.
Prison inmates with major psychiatric disorders are more likely than those without to have had previous incarcerations. The authors recommend expanding interventions to reduce recidivism among mentally ill inmates. They discuss the potential benefits of continuity of care reentry programs to help mentally ill inmates connect with community-based mental health programs at the time of their release, as well as a greater role for mental health courts and other diversion strategies.
过去40年里,一系列法律、社会和政治因素导致了美国监狱系统中精神疾病的流行。尽管大量调查表明,与普通人群相比,监狱囚犯中精神疾病的发病率大幅上升,但尚不清楚精神疾病是否是多次入狱的风险因素。作者在一项对美国最大的州监狱系统的回顾性队列研究中检验了这种关联。
研究人群包括79211名在2006年9月1日至2007年8月31日期间开始服刑的囚犯。从全州范围的医疗信息系统中获取了有关精神疾病、人口统计学特征以及前6年监禁史的数据,并进行了分析。
患有重度精神疾病(重度抑郁症、双相情感障碍、精神分裂症和非精神分裂性精神障碍)的囚犯在6年研究期间多次入狱的风险大幅增加。双相情感障碍囚犯的风险增加最为显著,与没有重度精神疾病的囚犯相比,他们有过四次或更多次入狱经历的可能性是其3.3倍。
患有重度精神疾病的监狱囚犯比没有精神疾病的囚犯更有可能有过入狱经历。作者建议扩大干预措施,以减少患有精神疾病的囚犯的再犯率。他们讨论了连续性护理再入狱计划的潜在益处,以帮助患有精神疾病的囚犯在获释时与社区心理健康计划建立联系,以及心理健康法庭和其他分流策略可发挥更大作用。