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Journal ArticleDOI

Mental Health Issues in Long-Term Solitary and “Supermax” Confinement:

Craig Haney
- 01 Jan 2003 - 
- Vol. 49, Iss: 1, pp 124-156
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TLDR
The article suggests that the courts, though in some ways appropriately solicitous of the plight of mentally ill supermax prisoners, have overlooked some of the broader psychological problems these units create.
Abstract
This article discusses the recent increase in the use of solitary-like confinement, especially the rise of so-called supermax prisons and the special mental health issues and challenges they pose. After briefly discussing the nature of these specialized and increasingly widespread units and the forces that have given rise to them, the article reviews some of the unique mental-health-related issues they present, including the large literature that exists on the negative psychological effects of isolation and the unusually high percentage of mentally ill prisoners who are confined there. It ends with a brief discussion of recent caselaw that addresses some of these mental health issues and suggests that the courts, though in some ways appropriately solicitous of the plight of mentally ill supermax prisoners, have overlooked some of the broader psychological problems these units create.

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References
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Book

Trauma and Recovery

TL;DR: The Dialectic of Trauma Continues: Traumatic disorders as discussed by the authors, a Forgotten History, Terror, Disconnection, Captivity, and Child Abuse: A New Diagnosis Stages of Recovery.
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Complex PTSD : a syndrome in survivors of prolonged and repeated trauma

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the evidence for the existence of a complex form of post-traumatic disorder in survivors of prolonged, repeated trauma, which is currently under consideration for inclusion in DSM-IV under the name of DESNOS (Disorders of Extreme Stress Not Otherwise Specified).
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Restraint and seclusion: A review of the literature.

TL;DR: The literature on restraint and seclusion supports the following: 1) Seclusion and restraint are basically efficacious in preventing injury and reducing agitation, and 2) Training in prediction and prevention of violence, in self-defense, and in implementation of restraint and/or seclusion is valuable in reducing rates and untoward effects.
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