首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health >From Punishment to Treatment: The Clinical Alternative to Punitive Segregation (CAPS) Program in New York City Jails
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From Punishment to Treatment: The Clinical Alternative to Punitive Segregation (CAPS) Program in New York City Jails

机译:从惩罚到治疗:纽约市监狱的临床治疗替代惩罚性隔离(CAPS)计划

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摘要

The proliferation of jails and prisons as places of institutionalization for persons with serious mental illness (SMI) has resulted in many of these patients receiving jail-based punishments, including solitary confinement. Starting in 2013, the New York City (NYC) jail system developed a new treatment unit for persons with SMI who were judged to have violated jail rules (and previously would have been punished with solitary confinement) called the Clinical Alternative to Punitive Segregation (CAPS) unit. CAPS is designed to offer a full range of therapeutic activities and interventions for these patients, including individual and group therapy, art therapy, medication counseling and community meetings. Each CAPS unit requires approximately $1.5 million more investment per year, largely in additional staff as compared to existing mental health units, and can house approximately 30 patients. Patients with less serious mental illness who received infractions were housed on units that combined solitary confinement with some clinical programming, called Restrictive Housing Units (RHU). Between 1 December 2013 and 31 March 2015, a total of 195 and 1433 patients passed through the CAPS and RHU units, respectively. A small cohort of patients experienced both CAPS and RHU (n = 90). For these patients, their rates of self-harm and injury were significantly lower while on the CAPS unit than when on the RHU units. Improvements in clinical outcomes are possible for incarcerated patients with mental illness with investment in new alternatives to solitary confinement. We have started to adapt the CAPS approach to existing mental health units as a means to promote better clinical outcomes and also help prevent jail-based infractions. The cost of these programs and the dramatic differences in length of stay for patients who earn these jail-based infractions highlight the need for alternatives to incarceration, some of which have recently been announced in NYC.
机译:监狱和监狱作为严重精神疾病患者的机构化场所而激增,导致许多此类患者受到基于监狱的惩罚,包括单独监禁。从2013年开始,纽约市(NYC)监狱系统为被判定违反监狱规则(以前曾被单独监禁)的SMI患者开发了一种新的治疗单位,称为“临床治疗替代性隔离”(CAPS) )单位。 CAPS旨在为这些患者提供全方位的治疗活动和干预措施,包括个人和团体治疗,艺术治疗,药物咨询和社区会议。每个CAPS部门每年需要增加大约150万美元的投资,与现有的精神卫生部门相比,主要是在额外的工作人员上,并且可以容纳大约30名患者。患有违规行为的精神疾病较轻的患者被安置在将单独监禁和某些临床计划相结合的单元中,称为限制性住房单元(RHU)。在2013年12月1日至2015年3月31日期间,共有195和1433名患者分别通过CAPS和RHU病房。一小部分患者同时经历了CAPS和RHU(n = 90)。对于这些患者,在CAPS装置上的自残率和自伤率明显低于RHU装置。精神疾病的被监禁患者有可能改善临床结果,并投资新的单独监禁替代方法。我们已开始将CAPS方法调整为适用于现有的精神卫生部门,以促进更好的临床效果并帮助预防基于监狱的违规行为。这些计划的成本以及获得这些基于监狱的违规行为的患者在住院时间上的巨大差异都凸显了对替代监禁的需求,最近纽约市已经宣布了其中一些替代办法。

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