Jails and Prisons Are Becoming Separation Bins for the Mentally Ill
Last edited Sat Apr 12, 2014, 01:16 PM - Edit history (1)
Vox reported on the published study and the study found that 356,268 inmates have a severe mental illness, and there has been a major push for deinstitutionalization since the 1950s. Deinstitutionalization is the movement to remove the mentally ill from long-stay mental facilities and place them into community-based treatment centers.
Forty-four states and Washington D.C. have correctional facilities that house more mentally ill people than each of those states largest mental health facility. The TAC report outlined many problems caused by housing mentally ill inmates:
from ring of fire
from the vox article

edit: forgot to say that i found this in good reads
mopinko
(73,419 posts)he has gotten things to where most folks who are in the jail can get treated. he says that the hard part is that in the county jail people can be there one day and gone the next. they try to release them with a referral and weeks worth of meds, but that is about all they can do right now.
they are adding drug treatment, and working to add halfway housing that has the necessary support.
he also has accepted just about any suggestion that has an funds attached for any kind of job training. they now have a flock of chickens.
fizzgig
(24,146 posts)we have very limited mh beds in my county and they shut down the detox/mh center in the next county over. i worked on a campaign a number of years ago for a small tax increase to build another facility, but it failed pretty miserably.
