In state after state, prison systems have long been plagued by inadequate health care, resulting in the spread of treatable diseases and, in many cases, preventable deaths behind bars, reported Vox. But a key demographic trend threatens to make that problem even worse: Over the last several decades, America’s prison population has been rapidly aging, and, as in Washington’s case, prisoners’ health needs have become more significant as a result.
Here is a link to a column I wrote on prisons as de facto mental health facilities In the Criminal Justice System things are Worse than they Seem
People who were 55 years old or older made up about 3
percent of the US prison population in 1991; by 2021, they accounted
for 15 percent. The total number of older prisoners is also steadily growing,
with no signs of abatement: In 2020, there were about 166,000 incarcerated
people aged 55 years or older; that number grew to about 178,000
in 2021 and 186,000
in 2022.
The graying of America’s incarcerated population is
effectively turning the US prison system into a de facto nursing home, leaving
hundreds of thousands of older people in its care each year. The result is
skyrocketing costs: The Bureau of Prisons’ health care spending on federal
inmates rose
from $978 million in 2009 to $1.34 billion in 2016, and various state
governments have seen similar increases.
Still, conditions in American prisons continue to be
detrimental to people’s health and often lead to
accelerated aging. Prisoners, for example, are much more likely to exhibit
signs of cognitive decline, including dementia, at an earlier age than the
general population, and one study found that a 59-year-old in prison has the same
morbidity rate — that is, how often people get a disease — as a
nonincarcerated 75-year-old.
“We have facilities that aren’t
considered humane,” said Lauren-Brooke
Eisen, a senior director at the Brennan Center for Justice. “They’re not
places for elderly people who have dementia and diabetes and maybe walkers or
wheelchairs.”
All of this raises both a moral and practical policy
question that lawmakers have to face: Why are we forcing older people to spend
their dying years in prison when they can get better care elsewhere?
People aren’t just aging behind bars; police are locking up
the elderly
One of the explanations for the aging prison population is
simple: Since the 1970s and the age of mass incarceration — when the American
prison population ballooned and gave the United States the distinction of
imprisoning more
people than any other country in the world — people have been aging
behind bars.
The other explanation, however, is less obvious: Older
people have been getting arrested at higher rates than they used to. In 1991,
for example, people who were 55 years of age or older made up only 2 percent of
adults who were arrested; by 2021, they made up 8 percent, according to the
Prison Policy Initiative, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit that does criminal justice research
and advocacy. The Marshall Project also
found a similar pattern: Between 2000 and 2020, there was nearly a 30
percent increase in the number of arrests of people over 65, despite the
overall number of arrests dropping by nearly 40 percent.
So why are arrests among older people suddenly on the rise?
The resurging trend across many American cities and states to further
criminalize poverty and impose
harsher punishments for petty crimes, including things like shoplifting, is
partly to blame because the groups of people who become common targets for
police are getting older.
“People who
are unhoused and people suffering from mental
health disorders and substance
use disorders are also aging,” said Mike Wessler, the communications
director at the Prison
Policy Initiative. “If you look across the country right now, we’re
obviously seeing efforts to ramp up policing of people who are unhoused, people
with untreated mental health disorders,
people with substance use disorder. So it’s almost a certainty that in the
coming years we are probably going to see this problem get worse.”
People experiencing cognitive decline, including those
suffering from dementia, can also be especially
vulnerable during interactions
with police. Henry Hart, a 76-year-old with dementia in Maryland, for
example, was arrested when he had what his daughter described as a mental
breakdown. During the incident, Hart had grown agitated and hit her, and when
she called for paramedics to take him to the hospital, police showed up at the
scene instead. Officers ultimately arrested him for assault despite his family
members’ pleas. After spending time in jail, Hart’s condition seemed to get
notably worse, according to his daughter.
“As Maryland’s population ages, experts fear that police
will encounter people with dementia more often and without recognizing the
condition or knowing how to respond to it,” Baltimore Sun reporters Angela
Roberts and Cassidy Jensen wrote. “Arrest or jail time can be especially
harmful to people with dementia, given their mental and physical vulnerability,
experts say.”
There’s also evidence that beefing up law enforcement has
had a negative impact on older people. While younger people have become less
likely to be arrested for drug-related crimes than in the past, arrests of
older people for drug-related offenses have spiked. Between 2000 and 2018, for
example, drug-related arrests of people over the age of 50 rose
by 92 percent — the fastest increase out of any age group. And while
substance use disorder among older people
is on the rise, addressing the problem through stricter law enforcement is
not a practical solution.
“It’s a heck of a lot easier to order
the National Guard to go stand on subway platforms than it is to
figure out how to expand mental health treatment in the state; than to figure
out how to address substance use disorders in the state; than to figure out how
to address the housing crisis in the state,” Wessler said.
The consequences of an aging prison population
Studies have shown that incarcerated people have signs of aging at
a faster rate than others as a result of prison conditions, and that
each year in prison can shave
years off of someone’s life.
“Health care behind bars is bad even in the best scenarios,”
Wessler said. “And that’s kind of by design in a lot of respects: Prisons are
not places that are therapeutic or designed to heal; they are places that are
designed to punish.”
Infectious diseases tend
to disproportionately affect prisoners compared to the general
population, and the Covid pandemic in particular showed why prisons are
especially dangerous for older people. Deaths of inmates rose by
nearly 50 percent in the first year of the pandemic, and while
mortality rates increased for prisoners across all ages, older people saw
the highest surge in mortality. By contrast, among the general population,
it was younger people who saw the highest increase in death rates.
From a public policy standpoint, the aging prison population
is a failure on multiple fronts. Most importantly, prisons cause people to age
more quickly and die prematurely. After all, while so-called “natural” deaths —
that is, death from disease or old age — make up the vast majority of deaths
behind bars, they often
receive little scrutiny despite the fact that many of them have been
found to be the result of medical neglect.
But it’s also costing states a lot of money — money that is
clearly not well spent. In Texas, for example, the state’s prison health care
costs increased
by more than $250 million between 2012 and 2019, although the prison
population actually decreased by 3 percent during that time. The state’s prison
population aged 55 or older, on the other hand, had increased by 65 percent during
that same period, according to data reviewed by the Texas Tribune.
Some lawmakers have noted this is unsustainable. As former
state Sen. John Whitmire told
the Tribune, “Nobody’s tougher on crime than me, but once you’ve
incarcerated a guy past the point that he’s a threat to anybody, I’d like to
save that $500,000 to put him in a nursing home as a condition of parole, take
that money, and spend it on either other public safety efforts or prison
costs.”
The system as it is, in other words, isn’t benefiting
anyone. It’s both deadlier and more financially costly.
And from a moral standpoint, it’s hard for a society to
defend these outcomes. “Do we morally think that it is good to have people
spend their dying years behind bars, especially for drug crimes from the ’80s
and ’90s?” Wessler said. “That strikes me as morally wrong in addition to being
bad public policy.”
Tougher penalties turn into de facto death sentences
In many ways, America’s aging prisons are the expected end
result of the tough-on-crime approaches and surge in arrests of the 1980s and
1990s.
A study by researchers at the the State University of New
York at Albany, the University of Pennsylvania, and the RAND Corporation, found
that young
people who were locked up in the 1990s spent more time behind bars
than any other generation, in large part because of tougher and longer
sentences, higher recidivism rates, and escalating punishments for people who
are rearrested. And that generation is now aging behind bars, unlikely to ever
come out of prison.
“These extreme sentence lengths paired with narrow release
mechanisms — meaning fewer ways to actually leave the system — led to this huge
crisis of older adults in American prisons,” Eisen, from the Brennan Center,
said. “Because what you had is more people coming in, people staying for
longer, and then fewer avenues for release because of mandatory minimums,
because of three strikes [laws], because of life without parole.”
While many older people in prison today are being sent there
for petty crimes, it’s also true that many others, particularly those serving
longer sentences, have been convicted of serious crimes. But regardless of what
a person is guilty of, the fate of a death behind bars — which can be the
result of inadequate medical care and botched treatments — could itself be seen
as a cruel punishment, especially when people no longer pose a threat to
society.
Take, for example, the case of Walter Jordan, another
elderly Arizona prisoner whose story is eerily similar to Richard Washington’s.
Jordan, a 67-year-old man who was convicted of first-degree
murder and kidnapping, was serving a life sentence. In
a memo he wrote to a federal judge in 2017, he alleged that the
state’s Department of Corrections and its private health care contractor had
delayed his treatment for skin cancer. The memo was, in his words, a “notice of
impending death.”
Jordan wrote that he was in pain and suffering from memory
loss. He alleged that other prisoners were also being denied care, and he wrote
that as a result of his delayed treatment, he would be “lucky to be alive for
30 days.”
Jordan was right: Just over a week later, he was dead. A
physician who reviewed his case found that Jordan could have survived had he
received adequate care. The situation was “horrific,” the physician
wrote. “He suffered excruciating needless pain from cancer that was not
appropriately managed in the months prior to his death.”
There are more humane approaches. States and the federal
government can start, for example, by expanding eligibility for compassionate
release, which truncates sentences but tends to be reserved for people with
terminal illnesses. Parole — which can sometimes have unintended consequences
including strict rules that often
result in parolees being sent back to prison — can also be especially
beneficial to elderly prisoners who can get better health care outside of
prison. And yet, tough-on-crime laws like those recently passed in Louisiana
are making
it harder for prisoners to be eligible for parole.
Governors can also make use of their pardon powers and
commute sentences for older prisoners who have shown signs of rehabilitation.
And instead of readopting a tough-on-crime approach that will likely result in
more arrests of older people, states and the federal government can support
social safety net programs that would lift older people out of poverty and
homelessness, reducing their odds of being arrested in the first place.
America’s jail and prison population peaked
in 2008, when more than 2.3 million people were behind bars. And while it
has mostly declined since then — especially during Covid, when many
prisoners were released as the virus ravaged prisons — it has
recently been
ticking back up.
“We have far too many people in our prisons,” Eisen said.
One of the fastest ways to address that problem is to release older people, who
generally don’t pose a public safety risk. “This is a population that shouldn’t
be behind bars.”
But until lawmakers acknowledge that the current prison
system is failing some of the most vulnerable people in its care, cases like
Washington’s or Jordan’s will become all the more common. And more and more
people who are now serving time in an American prison will slowly come to learn
that their punishment has morphed into a death sentence.
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