Cross-posted from Beyond VSH:
A new reported shows that the Vermont Department of Corrections may administer antipsychotic drugs to more of its prisoners than any other state. A study done by the Associated Press shows that 46% of all prisoners held by the Department of Corrections were prescribed antipsychotics.
Even the Department seems to admit that these drugs are overused. For instance, Dr. Susan Wehry, the medical director for the Department of Corrections, admitted that some powerful drugs, such as Seroquel, are given to help prisoners sleep, and that sometimes doctors prescribe antipsychotics for prisoners who request them rather than have to deal with a grievance from a prisoner who wants them. “Quite frankly, I think docs get worn down,” she told AP.”
Given that the incidence of schizophrenia worldwide is estimated at 1%, the adminstration of antipsychotics to 46% of Vermont prisoners seems very difficult to justify.
Aside from whether all this use of antispychotics is justified, it is important to consider the impact of this news on the VSH Futures effort. As you know, this has been going on for years in an effort to design a replacement for the Vermont State Hospital. Naturally, one of the big questions has been the size of any new facility, which, of course, entails an understanding of the need. For years, mental health advocates have been arguing that the State has sytematically understated the number of Corrections inmates with severe mental illnesses, and for just as long the State has been reporting laughably small numbers for these prisoners.
So tell me: if the mental health needs of DoC prisoners are so high that almost half of them need antipsychotics, what should we be doing to plan for their mental health needs in the future?