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Current and Prior Mental Health Treatment of Jail Inmates: The Use of the Jail as an Alternative Shelter

Current and Prior Mental Health Treatment of Jail Inmates: The Use of the Jail as an Alternative... AbstractChanging policies in mental health and welfare are altering the character of urban jail populations. Iiomeless people, many of them ex-mental-hospital patients, occupy jail space in increasing numbers. They almost never commit violent crimes and seldom commit any real crime. They are given a charge and put in jail as a way to take them off the streets. The way in which official statistics are created and kept makes it difficult to demonstrate the nature and extent of this problem. This paper reports on one way this can be done. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Social Distress and Homeless Taylor & Francis

Current and Prior Mental Health Treatment of Jail Inmates: The Use of the Jail as an Alternative Shelter

Journal of Social Distress and Homeless , Volume 10 (3): 14 – Jan 1, 2001

Current and Prior Mental Health Treatment of Jail Inmates: The Use of the Jail as an Alternative Shelter

Journal of Social Distress and Homeless , Volume 10 (3): 14 – Jan 1, 2001

Abstract

AbstractChanging policies in mental health and welfare are altering the character of urban jail populations. Iiomeless people, many of them ex-mental-hospital patients, occupy jail space in increasing numbers. They almost never commit violent crimes and seldom commit any real crime. They are given a charge and put in jail as a way to take them off the streets. The way in which official statistics are created and kept makes it difficult to demonstrate the nature and extent of this problem. This paper reports on one way this can be done.

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References (71)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright 2001 Taylor and Francis Group LLC
ISSN
1573-658X
eISSN
1053-0789
DOI
10.1023/A:1016640824536
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractChanging policies in mental health and welfare are altering the character of urban jail populations. Iiomeless people, many of them ex-mental-hospital patients, occupy jail space in increasing numbers. They almost never commit violent crimes and seldom commit any real crime. They are given a charge and put in jail as a way to take them off the streets. The way in which official statistics are created and kept makes it difficult to demonstrate the nature and extent of this problem. This paper reports on one way this can be done.

Journal

Journal of Social Distress and HomelessTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2001

Keywords: Jail; Homeless; Mental Illness; Data Quality

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