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1.
Inmate aging is considered to start at the age of 50, which is early in relation to aging in the general population. The aging of the criminal population in France poses a real public health problem. There is very little research on the mental health (mental and cognitive disorders) of older inmates.ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of age and time spent in prison on mental disorders and cognitive performance of elderly prison inmates. We put forward the hypothesis that age and amount of time spent in prison are associated with the deterioration of older inmates’ mental health, that is, an increase in the prevalence of psychiatric disorders and a decrease in cognitive performance.MethodsWe recruited 138 men aged 50 and over in seven French prisons. The research protocol included a semi-directive interview, the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI DSM-IV) for the assessment of mental disorders, as well as the Rapid Battery for Frontal Efficiency (BREF) and the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) for the evaluation of cognitive performance.ResultsThe average age of the inmates (N = 138) was 59.7 years (range 50–84, SD = 8.02). The average sentence was approximately 13.5 years (SD = 7) and the average time spent in prison was 6.9 years (SD = 5.9). The results showed a very high prevalence of mental disorders, notably depression and anxiety, and cognitive disorders. However, the probability of occurrence of certain psychiatric diagnoses decreases with age (major depressive episode, agoraphobia, post-traumatic stress disorder and generalized anxiety). In addition, logistic regression estimates showed no significant relationship between time spent in prison and mental disorders. However, there is a significant link between time spent in prison and cognitive impairment.ConclusionOur hypothesis is partially validated. Indeed, age is not associated with mental or cognitive disorders. However, the amount of time spent in prison has an effect on the deterioration of certain cognitive functions. It appears that after the age of 50, it is not chronological age but environmental factors that mainly explain cognitive decline. Our study shows that the longer the detention period, the greater the inmate's cognitive decline. These results highlight the very high vulnerability of elderly prisoners in terms of mental health and emphasize the importance of implementing appropriate detection and care measures to address the needs of this segment of the criminal population. Routine screening for cognitive impairment in all older prisoners should be carried out by caregivers in penitentiary institutions. Furthermore, better follow-up and cognitive assessment of prisoners aged 50 or more and whose length of incarceration exceeds five years could make it possible to detect subjects at risk and to propose appropriate activities to reduce and/or delay the effects of aging in detention.  相似文献   

2.
In this report, the author advances the hypothesis that sport activities could compromise a therapeutic alliance in the case of psychiatric follow-ups. The approach is a phenomenological, clinical and anthropological one based on three clinical situations. This hypothesis was verified but has not been applicable to the whole population of prisoners. If psychiatric and psychotherapic follow-ups can not be positively correlated with the notion of therapeutic alliance, there is a risk factor and therefore a predictability of relapse for bipolar disorders and for clinical decompensation whether auto- or heteroaggressive. Finally, the components of the universe of the exercise grounds and of psychopathology in the prison society of the Fleury-Mérogis prison are psychiatry, sports, stimulating and sedative substances. The hypothesis was confirmed by facts, as follow-ups are not frequent due to « too much sport », and to patients « sinking » into a psychopathological process. The following other variables were analysed: sex, age, personal health antecedents and justice antecedents. The three patients studied had a criminal past consisting of sexual assault, murders or drug dealing. Based on available data, the analysis indicates that the three prisoners decompensate along same mode: bipolar disorders followed by immediate admission in a psychiatric hospital, which in turn entails a change in the initial punishment.  相似文献   

3.
Relationships are difficult between psychiatry and Justice. Psychiatry is regarded either as an enemy of freedom or as too liberal. One criticizes it for its disengagement from the hospital and for its responsibility regarding a so-called excess of hospital beds. The responsibility of Psychiatry in the accumulation in jails of mental patients is often denounced. However, since the birth of the diagnosis of mental disorders, psychiatry evolves by extending its field of competence beyond the recognized psychoses to an operative clinic in the borderline disorders. Our societies are not satisfied and ask the psychiatrist to be present in any violence and with each delinquent. Crime and psychiatric disorders are regularly confused. Are our societies sick of their fears while confusing in its representations crime and madness, care and punishment?  相似文献   

4.
5.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The published literature from 2004 on mental disorders in jails and prisons was reviewed. RECENT FINDINGS: A number of important studies on prisoner suicide, older prisoners, prison medical services and inmate mental health are highlighted, which provide useful potential interventions to improve the care of mentally ill prisoners. Relevant pieces on ethical issues are also discussed. SUMMARY: Despite increasing prison populations worldwide and robust evidence that serious mental disorders are common in inmates in Western countries, many key issues in the treatment of mentally disordered prisoners remain unanswered. In addition, the evidence base on the nature and prevalence of mental disorders in prisoners in non-Western countries remains small.  相似文献   

6.
From the analysis of clinical data and the viewpoint of the bibliographic data, bringing out the comorbidity epilepsy/mental health, frequency of personality disorders during epilepsy and constancy of behavioural troubles are outlined. However, results of works, dealing with behavioural disorders, are often contradictory. Association with mental retardation shows a problem of imputability. Depressive mood, often concomitant with anxiety disorders, represent the psychiatric comorbidity frequently associated with epilepsy; recent works assess the factors of seriousness of depression. As for the relationship between psychosis and epilepsy, the term ”epileptic psychosis” indicates today specific entity. Psychotic patients who suffer from epilepsy are not in that concept frame. Alcoholism does not seem more frequent in people suffering from epilepsy than in general population. The social disqualification assessed by the scales of quality of life is frequent with people suffering from epilepsy.  相似文献   

7.
PURPOSE: To describe the prevalence and nature of epileptic seizure disorders in a typical UK prison and compare the care offered to prisoners to the recommendations of the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE). METHODS: Over a 14-month period, all prisoners identified as having epilepsy were registered by prison primary healthcare services at a category 'C' prison holding 640 male adults. Prison and National Health Service health records were reviewed, prisoners were re-assessed by members of a specialist secondary care service based in the local general hospital NHS. RESULTS: Twenty-six prisoners were thought to have epilepsy. 61.5% of diagnoses had not been made by epilepsy specialists, 73.1% had uncontrolled seizures, only 19.2% had had computed tomography, none magnetic resonance imaging. At review, 30.8% of prisoners were thought to require neuroimaging, 19.2% cardiac investigations. The diagnosis of epilepsy was confirmed in only 57.9% of those prisoners considered to have the condition by prison healthcare services. 53.8% of those prisoners confirmed as having epilepsy had not had a medical review in the past 12 months; 63.2% required a change in their antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). CONCLUSION: Although the prevalence of epilepsy in this prison population appeared high at first sight, a critical review of the diagnoses reduced the difference to the prevalence of epilepsy in the population at large. Fewer prisoners than expected achieved seizure control. Collaboration with specialist epilepsy services was poor. There were significant discrepancies between the healthcare provision in prison and the NICE epilepsy guidelines.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the impact of a psychiatric service in a prison general hospital that refers prisoners with mental disorders to a separate forensic psychiatric hospital (FPH). METHOD: Analysis of data on prison population and referrals to the FPH. RESULTS: Despite a 10.9% increase in the overall prison system population over 3 years, referrals from the prison general hospital with the new psychiatric service to the FPH were reduced by 36.5%, whereas referrals from other prisons increased by 120.4%. CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrate the efficiency of the new primary health care approach.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: The National Study on Psychiatric Morbidity in New Zealand Prisons identified undiagnosed mental illness and unmet treatment needs for mentally disordered offenders. As approximately 50% of prisoners are of Maori and 8.3% Pacific Island ethnicity, we analyzed the data to determine if there were any differences in the rates of major mental disorders between ethnic groups. METHOD: A census of all female prisoners, all remand male prisoners and an 18% random sample of the sentenced male prisoners were interviewed employing the diagnostic interview for mental illness (CIDI-A), screening diagnostic interview for relevant personality disorders (PDQ) and suicide screening questions. Self-identified ethnicity was recorded. Ethnic groups were compared for sociodemographic variables, morbidity for mental disorder, treatment experience and suicidality. RESULTS: The ethnic groups were largely similar in age and current prevalence for mental disorders, although there was some evidence of differing sociodemographic factors, especially younger age among the Maori prisoners. Maori report fewer suicidal thoughts, but acted suicidally at the same rate as non-Maori. Treatment for mental disorder was less common among Maori and Pacific Island prisoners than others, both in prison and in the community. CONCLUSION: Criminogenic factors present in the developmental histories of prisoners might also increase the risk of mental disorders. Ethnic groups were not different in the rate at which they manifest mental disorders in the face of such factors. Younger prisoners were disproportionately more likely to be of Maori or Pacific Island ethnicity. Both prior to and after entry to prison, services must improve responsiveness to Maori and Pacific Island people.  相似文献   

10.
《L'Encéphale》2023,49(3):289-295
ContextThe high prevalence of psychiatric disorders among people in prison is well documented, and several hypotheses have been proposed to explain this overrepresentation. In France, the decrease in the number of people found by the judge to be not criminally responsible on account of mental disorder after a psychiatric expertise could play a crucial role. The Château-Thierry prison is a high-security correctional facility where prisoners whose integration into a “standard” prison is complicated because of behavioural problems, reside. We conducted the first study to describe the judicial and healthcare trajectories of people incarcerated in this facility.MethodAll the people incarcerated in the Château-Thierry prison between May and September 2019 were included in this cross-sectional study. In addition to sociodemographic characteristics, data on the psychiatric care before and during incarceration as well as information on the judicial and prison history were collected. We also analyzed all the pre-sentencing psychiatric reports in order to collect the degree of discernment determined by the psychiatrist expert for each included individual.ResultsSixty-eight (97%) of the 70 people detained at the Château-Thierry prison during the study period were included and 92 pre-sentencing psychiatric reports were analyzed. The population studied was exclusively male, with an average age of 40 years, low socio-economic status and frequent criminal history (79%). About half of them (46%) had already been hospitalized in a psychiatric community hospital prior to incarceration, and 79% have been hospitalized in a psychiatric facility during their incarceration. Disciplinary sanctions were frequent (72%) as well as convictions for offenses committed while in prison (57%). When at least one pre-sentencing psychiatric report was carried out (29 persons had a single psychiatric forensic evaluation and 27 ones had multiple evaluations), at least one psychiatric expert had concluded to a diminished (but not lack of) criminal responsibility in almost half of the cases (44%).ConclusionThis study shows the extent to which people incarcerated in the Château-Thierry prison are affected by psychiatric disorders. It also highlights the difficulties of coping with the prison environment for people suffering from psychiatric disorders. Finally, it raises the question of the lack of diversion programs for the individuals in France with mental health problems whose responsibility has been considered as full or diminished.  相似文献   

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