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Post
Incarceration
Syndrome
and Relapse
By
Terence T. Gorski
“Since PICS is created by criminal justice system policy
and programming in our well intentioned but misguided attempt to stop
crime, the epidemic can be prevented and public safety protected by
changing the public policies that call for incarcerating more people, for
longer periods of time, for less severe offenses, in more punitive
environments that emphasize the use of solitary confinement, that
eliminate or severely restrict prisoner access to educational, vocational,
and rehabilitation programs while incarcerated.”
http://www.tgorski.com/criminal_justice/cjs_pics_&_relapse.htm
The Post Incarceration Syndrome (PICS) is a serious problem that contributes
to relapse in addicted and mentally ill offenders who are released from
correctional institutions. Currently 60% of prisoners have been in prison
before and there is growing evidence that the Post Incarceration Syndrome (PICS)
is a contributing factor to this high rate of recidivism.
The concept of a post incarceration syndrome (PICS) has emerged from
clinical consultation work with criminal justice system rehabilitation
programs working with currently incarcerated prisoners and with addiction
treatment programs and community mental health centers working with recently
released prisoners.
This article will provide an operational definition of the Post
Incarceration Syndrome (PICS), describe the common symptoms, recommend
approaches to diagnosis and treatment, explore the implications of this
serious new syndrome for community safety, and discuss the need for
political action to reduce the number of prisoners and assure more humane
treatment within our prisons, jails, and correctional institutions as a
means of prevention.
Post
Incarceration Syndrome (PICS) - Operational
Definition
The
Post Incarceration Syndrome (PICS) is a mixed mental disorders with four
clusters of symptoms:
-
Institutionalized Personality Traits resulting from a chronic state of
learned helplessness,
-
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) from both pre-incarceration trauma
and institutional abuse,
-
Antisocial
Personality Traits (ASPT) developed as a coping response to institutional
abuse, and
-
a Social-Sensory Deprivation Syndrome caused by prolonged exposure to
solitary confinement. PICS often coexists with substance use disorders and
a variety of affective and personality disorders.
The Post Incarceration Syndrome (PICS) is a set of symptoms that are present
in many currently incarcerated and recently released prisoners that are
caused by being subjected to prolonged incarceration in environments of
punishment with few opportunities for education, job training, or
rehabilitation. The symptoms are most severe in prisoners subjected to
prolonged solitary confinement and severe institutional abuse.
The severity of symptoms is related to the level of coping skills prior to
incarceration, the length of incarceration, the restrictiveness of the
incarceration environment, the number and severity of institutional abuse
episodes experienced, the number and duration of episodes of solitary
confinement, and the degree of involvement in educational, vocational, and
rehabilitation programs.
Symptoms
of the Post Incarceration Syndrome (PICS)
Below is a more detailed description of four clusters of symptoms of Post
Incarceration Syndrome (PICS):
-
Institutionalized Personality Traits—Institutionalized Personality Traits
are caused by living in an oppressive environment that demands:
-
passive compliance to the demands of authority figures,
-
passive acceptance of severely restricted acts of daily living,
-
the
repression of personal lifestyle preferences,
the elimination of critical thinking and individual decision making, and
-
internalized acceptance of severe restrictions on the honest
self-expression thoughts and feelings.
-
Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)—PTSD
from both traumatic experiences before incarceration and institutional
abuse during incarceration that includes the six clusters of symptoms:
(1) intrusive memories and flashbacks to episodes of severe institutional
abuse;
(2) intense psychological distress and physiological reactivity when
exposed to cues triggering memories of the institutional abuse;
(3) episodes of dissociation, emotional numbing, and restricted affect;
(4) chronic problems with mental functioning that include irritability,
outbursts of anger, difficulty concentrating, sleep disturbances, and an
exaggerated startle response.
(5) persistent avoidance of anything that would trigger memories of the
traumatic events;
(6) hypervigilance, generalized paranoia, and reduced capacity to trust
caused by constant fear of abuse from both correctional staff and other
inmates that can be generalized to others after release.
-
Antisocial Personality Traits:
Antisocial Personality Traits both preexisting and developed within the
institution as an institutional coping skill and psychological defense
mechanism. The primary antisocial personality traits involve the tendency
to challenge authority, break rules, and victimize others. In patients
with PICS these tendencies are veiled by the passive aggressive style that
is part of the institutionalized personality.
Patients with PICS tend to be duplicitous, acting in a compliant and
passive aggressive manner with therapists and other perceived authority
figures while being capable of direct threatening and aggressive behavior
when alone with peers outside of the perceived control of those in
authority. This is a direct result of the internalized coping behavior
required to survive in a harshly punitive correctional institution that
has two set of survival rules: passive aggression with the guards, and
actively aggressive with predatory inmates.
-
Social-Sensory Deprivation Syndrome:
The Social-Sensory Deprivation Syndrome is caused by the effects of
prolonged solitary confinement that imposes both social isolation and
sensory deprivation.
These symptoms include severe chronic headaches, developmental regression,
impaired impulse control, dissociation, inability to concentrate,
repressed rage, inability to control primitive drives and instincts,
inability to plan beyond the moment, inability to anticipate logical
consequences of behavior, out of control obsessive thinking, and
borderline personality traits. [Reference: Grassian, Stuart,
Psychopathological effects of solitary confinement, American Journal of
Psychiatry, 140, 1450 - 1454 (1983)]
The syndrome is most severe in prisoners incarcerated for longer than one
year in a punishment oriented environment, who have experienced multiple
episodes of institutional abuse, who have had little or no access to
education, vocational training, or rehabilitation, who have been subjected
to 30 days or longer in solitary confinement, and who have experienced
frequent and severe episodes of trauma as a result of institutional abuse.
The syndrome is least severe in prisoners incarcerated for shorter periods
of time in rehabilitation oriented programs, who have reasonable access to
educational and vocational training, and who have not been subjected to
solitary confinement, and who have not experienced frequent or severe
episodes of institutional abuse.
There is good reason to be concerned because about 40% of the total
incarcerated population (currently .7 million prisoners and growing) are
released each year.
The number prisoners being deprived of rehabilitation services, experiencing
severely restrictive daily routines, being held in solitary confinement for
prolonged periods of time, or being abused by other inmates or correctional
staff is increasing.
The
effect of releasing this number of prisoners with psychiatric damage from
prolonged incarceration can have a number of devastating impacts upon
American society including the further devastation of inner city communities
and the destabilization of blue-collar and middle class districts unable to
reabsorb returning prisoners who are less likely to get jobs, more likely to
commit crimes, more likely to disrupt families. This could turn many
currently struggling lower middle class areas into slums. (Source: Sabol,
William, Urban Institute, Washington DC)
As more prisoners are returned to the community, behavioral health providers
can expect to see increases in patients admitted with the Post Incarceration
Syndrome and related substance use, mental, and personality disorders. The
national network of Community Mental health and Addiction treatment Programs
need to begin now to prepare their staff to identify and provide appropriate
treatment for this new type of client.
The nation's treatment providers, especially addiction treatment programs
and community mental health centers, are already experiencing a growing
number of clients experiencing the Post Incarceration Syndrome (PICS). This
increase is due to a number of factors including: the increasing size of the
prisoner population, the increasing use of restrictive and punishing
institutional practices, the reduction of access to education, vocational
training, and rehabilitation programs; the increasing use of solitary
confinement and the growing number of maximum security and super-max type
prison and jails.
Both the number of clients suffering from PICS and the average severity of
symptoms is expected to increase over the next decade. In 1995 there were
463-284 prisoners released back to the community. Based upon conservative
projections in the growth of the prisoner population it is projected that in
the year 2000 there will be 660,000 prisoners returned to the community, in
the year 2005 there will 887,000 prisoners returned to the community, and in
the year 2010 1.2 million prisoners will be released. (Reference: Abramsky,
Sasha, When They Get Out, Atlantic Monthly, June, 1999 p. 30). The
prediction of greater symptom severity is based upon the growing trend
toward longer periods of incarceration, more restrictive and punitive
conditions in correctional institutions, decreasing access to education,
vocational training, and rehabilitation, and the increasing use solitary
confinement as a tool for reducing the cost of prisoner management.
Clients with PICS are at a high risk for developing substance dependence,
relapsing to substance use if they were previously addicted, relapsing to
active mental illness if they were previously mentally ill, and returning to
a life of aggression, violence, and crime. They are also at high risk of
chronic unemployment and homelessness.
This is because released prisoners experiencing PICS tend to experience a
six stage post release symptom progression leading to recidivism and often
are not qualified for social benefits needed to secure addiction, mental
health, and occupation training services. Stage 1 of this Post Release
Syndrome is marked by Helplessness and hopelessness due to inability to
develop a plan for community reentry, often complicated by the inability to
secure funding for treatment or job training; Stage 2 is marked by an
intense immobilizing fear. Stage 3 is marked by the emergence of intense
free-floating anger and rage and the emergence of flashbacks and other
symptoms of PTSD. Stage 4 is marked by a tendency toward impulse violence
upon minimal provocation; Stage 5 is marked by an effort to avoid violence
by severe isolation to avoid the triggers of violence. Stage 6 is marked by
the intensification of flashbacks, nightmares, sleep impairments, and
impulse control problems caused by self-imposed isolation. This leads to
acting out behaviors, aggression, violence, and crime, which in turn sets
the stages for arrest and incarceration.
Currently 60% of prisoners have been in prison before and there is growing
evidence that the Post Incarceration Syndrome (PICS) is a contributing
factor to this high rate of recidivism.
Since PICS is created by criminal justice system policy and programming in
our well intentioned but misguided attempt to stop crime, the epidemic can
be prevented and public safety protected by changing the public policies
that call for incarcerating more people, for longer periods of time, for
less severe offenses, in more punitive environments that emphasize the use
of solitary confinement, that eliminate or severely restrict prisoner access
to educational, vocational, and rehabilitation programs while incarcerated.
The political antidote for PICS is to implement public policies that:
-
fund the training and expansion of community based addiction and mental
health programs staffed by professionals trained to meet the needs of
criminal justice system clients diverted into treatment by court programs
and released back to the community after incarceration;
-
expand the role of drug and mental health courts that promote treatment
alternatives to incarceration;
-
convert 80% of our federal, state, and county correctional facilities into
rehabilitation programs with daily involvement in educational, vocational,
and rehabilitation programs;
-
eliminate required long mandated minimum sentences;
-
institute universal prerelease programs for all offenders with the goal of
preparing them to transition into community based addiction and mental
health programs;
-
assure that all released prisoners have access to publicly funded programs
for addiction and mental health treatment upon release.
Copyright
2000, Terence T. Gorski
Reproduction of this material constitutes a 'fair use'
of copyrighted material as provided for in section 107
of the U.S. Copyright Law. In accordance with Title
17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed
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