County Jails Struggling With More Mentally Ill Inmates
The Denver Post
As county jails across the state face a
quickly growing population of mentally ill inmates, the Adams County
Sheriff's Office is looking for money to create a specialized unit to
house those prisoners.
The Sheriff's Office has asked for funding
either to renovate an unused portion of the jail for about $1.5 million
or to build a new wing at a cost of about $3 million to house the most
uncontrolled mentally ill inmates.
"It would give us an
opportunity to have a unit where they can be efficiently seen by,
treated by, our mental-health staff," said Adams County Sheriff Doug
Darr. "When we have this many people coming in with these issues, it
tells us something's wrong and we need to be on top of it."
The
Adams County commissioners have asked for more information from the
Sheriff's Office but aren't scheduled to take up the discussion any time
soon.
Although the Adams County jail may be the only large county
jail on the Front Range without a unit for the mentally ill inmates,
Darr isn't the only one who wishes he had more space.
"There's
an increase in people coming to jail with mental-health issues, and the
mental-health issues we're having to manage are more severe," said Bruce
Haas, administrative commander for the Boulder County Jail. "We have
people in disciplinary housing units that belong in special housing
units. There's more demand than we have space."
Haas said officials at the Boulder jail are also starting to explore options to find more room.
The
two options Darr's staff has proposed would allow deputies to move
mentally ill inmates from the shared infirmary unit of 15 double-bunked
cells to a separate unit with 16 double-bunked cells.
Abigail
Tucker, a psychologist who runs one of the support programs at the Adams
County jail, said a bipolar inmate who was in detox once spent 12
hours screaming right next to irritated inmates who were physically sick
and trying to rest.
"It's about making sure both are getting well," Tucker said. "Some people just have different needs."
Crowding the unstable inmates also creates a safety issue.
"Often
we have inmates with severe mental illness coming in with minor
charges, but while here they end up assaulting our officers and staff
and rack up charges more serious than what they came in for," said Capt.
Kurt Ester, commander of the Adams County jail.
But mentally ill inmates can also be the targets of violence.
"People
that are mentally ill are sometimes vulnerable or potential victims. We
don't want to put them in a position where they're going to be teased
or abused," said Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle.
Though the
state doesn't regulate many county jail operations, most large jails
follow similar processes based on published national best practices.
Screening can start with the officers or deputies on the street, or when suspects are booked in the jail.
Staff
members who range from certified nurses in Adams County to counseling
staff in Jefferson County undertake the first evaluations on every
inmate entering the jail.
Any warning sign of a mental condition
or a previous diagnosis will earn inmates a referral, but screening
staff prioritize the needs so that inmates who may have more severe
problems are seen first — often within 24 hours.
That appointment
is meant to be a more thorough screening, but at some jails, such as in
Jefferson County, getting another referral to a psychologist who can
make an official diagnosis and prescribe any needed medication can take
up to two more weeks.
Haas, the administrative commander in the
Boulder jail, points out that prescriptions aren't a solution if inmates
refuse to take them.
"Jails do not have the legal ability — even
if a psychologist has prescribed medication — to force inmates to take
that medication," Haas said. "Often that's when we see the greatest
volatility."
If a judge orders an inmate to a state hospital for
an evaluation before trial, staff there can involuntarily medicate
inmates to stabilize them, Haas said.
Inmates who aren't flagged
in those initial steps also have the opportunity to send private
messages to mental-health staff at any point during their stay.
Deputies, family members or other staff who notice irregular behavior also can flag an inmate for an evaluation.
Inmates
who are transferred to the special housing units — or in Adams County's
case, the infirmary — might then be evaluated daily to determine if
they have become stable enough to transfer to the general population to
make room for other incoming inmates who may have higher needs that day.
"Ultimately,
the state and the counties have to do something different," Boulder
Sheriff Pelle said. "When there's no more state hospital beds or there's
a severe shortage, it takes a long time to get someone in for
treatment. In the meantime, jail is an expensive alternative."
Yesenia Robles: 303-954-1372, yrobles@denverpost.com or twitter.com/yeseniarobles
Inmates seek counseling
Metro-area jails keep track of inmates with mental-health issues. In this list, the first number represents the percentage of all inmates with clinical diagnoses, such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. The second number, which was not reported by all jails, is the percentage of inmates seeking mental-health counseling for any reason.Adams: 22 percent
Arapahoe: 7 percent; 22 percent
Boulder: 35 percent
Denver: 3 percent; 60 percent
Jefferson: 16 percent
Douglas: 37 percent
2 comments:
Military Veterans suffering from untreated combat Post Traumatic War Disorders so need the care an alternative Veterans Village can provide - we are working for same
The War Widows
Mary Murphy,former VA/Prison Chaplain/Marshal Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals
mmurphy@veteranschamberofcommerce.org
very odd that Denver County reports only a 3% incident level of mentally-challenged inmates, as opposed to the double-digit rate for the other counties. Was this a typo? Or does it reflect Denver's inability to correctly diagnose and stabilize MH inmates?
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