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Mental Illness Offenders

Decent Essays

Since the Grassian (1983) publication, a number of investigators have claimed that inmates experienced a myriad of mental health concerns and symptoms, including appetite and sleep disturbance; anxiety, including panic; depression and hopelessness; irritability; anger and rage; lethargy; psychosis and cognitive rumination; social withdrawal; cognitive impairment; and suicidal ideation and self-injurious behaviors (see Andersen et al., 2000; Beven, 2005; Bonner, 2006; Brodsky & Scogin, 1988; Cloyes, Lovell, Allen, & Rhodes, 2006; F. Cohen, 2006, 2008, 2012; Glaze & Herberman, 2013; Grassian, 2006a, 2006b; Haney, 1993, 2003, 2009; Hayes & Rowan, 1988; Hresko, 2006; Kupers, 2008; Lovell, 2008; Metzner & Fellner, 2010; Miller & Young, 1997; P. S. Smith, 2008; Stephan, 2008). Offenders with mental illness are considered particularly vulnerable when placed in AS (Metzner & Fellner, 2010), as they may experience more mental health disturbance (i.e., greater symptomatology) than offenders with mental illness not placed in AS (O’Keefe, 2007; for a differing view, see Grassian & Friedman, 1986). …show more content…

In addition, indexes of all the issues of the journals that frequently publish segregation related works (e.g., Canadian Journal of Criminology, Crime & Delinquency, Criminal Justice and Behavior, Criminology, The Prison Journal) were examined to find any additional studies not discovered through the first

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