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Elderly Inmates: Aging Prison Population Strains Tight State Budgets

Aging Inmates

DAVID CRARY   01/27/12 06:12 AM ET  AP

NEW YORK — In corrections systems nationwide, officials are grappling with decisions about geriatric units, hospices and medical parole as elderly inmates – with their high rates of illness and infirmity – make up an ever increasing share of the prison population.

At a time of tight state budgets, it's a trend posing difficult dilemmas for policymakers. They must address soaring medical costs for these older inmates and ponder whether some can be safely released before their sentences expire.

The latest available figures from 2010 show that 8 percent of the prison population – 124,400 inmates – was 55 or older, compared to 3 percent in 1995, according to a report being released Friday by Human Rights Watch. This oldest segment grew at six times the rate of the overall prison population between 1995 and 2010, the report says.

"Prisons were never designed to be geriatric facilities," said Jamie Fellner, a Human Rights Watch special adviser who wrote the report. "Yet U.S. corrections officials now operate old age homes behind bars."

The main reasons for the trend, Fellner said, are the long sentences, including life without parole, that have become more common in recent decades, boosting the percentage of inmates unlikely to leave prison before reaching old age, if they leave at all. About one in 10 state inmates is serving a life sentence; an additional 11 percent have sentences longer than 20 years.

The report also notes an increase in the number of offenders entering prison for crimes committed when they were over 50. In Ohio, for example, the number of new prisoners in that age group jumped from 743 in 2000 to 1,815 in 2010, according to the report.

Fellner cited the case of Leonard Hudson, who entered a New York prison at age 68 in 2002 on a murder conviction and will be eligible for parole when he's 88. He's housed in a special unit for men with dementia and other cognitive impairments, Fellner said.

A.T. Wall, director of the Rhode Island Department of Corrections and president of the Association of State Correctional Administrators, said he and his colleagues regularly exchange ideas on how to cope with the surging numbers of older prisoners.

"We are accustomed to managing large numbers of inmates, and it's a challenge to identify particular practices that need to be put into place for a subset," he said. "There are no easy solutions."

Wall said prison officials confront such questions as whether to retrofit some cells with grab bars and handicap toilets, how to accommodate inmates' wheelchairs, and how to deal with inmates who no longer understand instructions.

"Dementia can set in, and an inmate who was formerly easy to manage becomes very difficult to manage," he said.

States are trying to meet the needs. Some examples:

_Washington state opened an assisted living facility at its Coyote Ridge prison complex in 2010, with a capacity of 74 inmates. It's reserved for inmates with a disability who are deemed to pose little security risk.

_The Louisiana State Penitentiary has had a hospice program for more than a decade, staffed by fellow prisoners who provide dying inmates with care ranging from changing diapers to saying prayers.

_In Massachusetts, a new corrections master plan proposes one or more new facilities to house aging inmates who need significant help with daily living. Some critics object, saying inmates shouldn't get specialized care that might not be available or affordable for members of the public.

_Montana's corrections department is seeking bids for a 120-bed prison that would include assisted-living facilities for some elderly inmates and others who need special care.

In Texas, legislators have been considering several options for addressing the needs of infirm, elderly inmates. State Rep. Jerry Madden, chairman of the House Corrections Committee, said no decisions have been made as the experts try to balance cost factors and public safety.

"You can't just generalize about these prisoners," he said. "Some are still extremely dangerous, some may not be.... Some you wouldn't want in the same assisted living facility with your parents or grandparents."

Fellner, who visited nine states and 20 prisons during her research, said corrections officials often were constrained by tight budgets, lack of support from elected officials, and prison architecture not designed to accommodate the elderly.

She noted that prison policies traditionally were geared to treat all inmates on an equal basis. So it may not be easy for prison officials to consider special accommodations for aging inmates, whether it be extra blankets, shortcuts to reduce walking distance, or sparing them from assignments to upper bunks.

The report said the number of aging prisoners will continue to grow unless there are changes to tough-on-crime policies such as long mandatory sentences and reduced opportunities for parole.

"How are justice and public safety served by the continued incarceration of men and women whose bodies and minds have been whittled away by age?" Fellner asked.

One of the problems facing prisons is that many of their health care staff lack expertise in caring for the elderly, according to Linda Redford, director of the geriatric education center at the University of Kansas Medical Center.

"It's a big struggle for them to keep up," said Redford, who has helped train prison staff and inmates in geriatric care.

"They're used to having to deal with issues of younger prisoners, such as HIV and substance abuse," she said.

Under a Supreme Court ruling, inmates are guaranteed decent medical care, but they lack their own insurance and states must pay the full cost. In Georgia, according to Fellner's report, inmates 65 and older had an average yearly medical cost of $8,565, compared with $961 for those under 65.

Redford said the challenges are compounded because inmates' health tends to decline more rapidly than that of other Americans of the same age due to long-term problems with drug use and poor health care.

"In the general population, 65 doesn't seem that old," Redford said. "In prison, there are 55-year-olds looking like they're 75."

Many states have adopted early release programs targeted at older inmates who are judged to pose little threat to public safety. However, a 2010 study by the Vera Institute of Justice in New York City found the laws were used infrequently, in part because of political considerations and complex review procedures.

Redford said a common problem is finding nursing homes or other assisted-living facilities that will accept released inmates who have family to live with.

"Nursing homes don't want former felons," she said. "Some states are looking at starting long-term care facilities outside prison for that could take care of parolees."

For inmates who are terminally ill and have no close family on the outside, it's probably more humane to let them die in prison if there's a hospice program available, Redford said.

"The inmates who are volunteering are at those guys' sides when they die – they're really committed to making the last days as comfortable as possible," Redford said. "They're not going to get that on the outside."

___

Online:

Human Rights Watch: http://www.hrw.org/

Association of State Correctional Administrators: http://www.asca.net/

___

David Crary can be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/CraryAP

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05:41 PM on 02/20/2012
Dear David Crary,
I enjoyed reading your perspective via your blog and agree with elderly inmates becoming an issue needing addressed.
Please read my blog at " http://quintonriter.blogspot.com/2012/02/aging-in-prison-by-quinton-riter.html" and give me your feedback. I would enjoy your perspective on my blog.
Quinton Riter
qr579910@ohio.edu
The Green Room at Ohio University
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slash77
You have failed me for the last time !!!!!
12:07 AM on 01/31/2012
"How are justice and public safety served by the continued incarceration of men and women whose bodies and minds have been whittled away by age?" Fellner asked.


Sorry, but more concerned about the many victims that never had the opportunity to ‘grow old’…… and many of them had gruesome painful deaths at the hands of these convicts!!!!
04:07 PM on 01/30/2012
Don't do the crime if you can't have your last breath looking at the bars on the windows, See you in the prison grave yard.
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climbing panda
there's a log in my cabin
01:17 PM on 01/30/2012
grant them clemency and return them to their families as long as they are no longer physically able to commit their crimes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dorian Mode
Emperor Of Earth
09:17 AM on 01/28/2012
To the Elderly inmates : Sorry Buddie this is when your punishment really begins, When your old and sick, and you realize that you took someone life and your about to meet your maker.This is when you pay for a life of stupidity, Your not the big bad gangster that you thought you were. Now you walk (waddle or wheel ) in the shoes of your victim, and in prison you are now the victim. You may not have paid for your crime when you were younger, but I bet you pray for death everyday. It very difficult to get a life sentence for anything except capital murder, so no I don't feel sorry for you.
04:40 AM on 02/01/2012
A third strike equaling 25 to life could be for stealing a pack of gum! There are hundreds of if not thousands of inmates who didn't commit a violent crime to get struck out that are going to die in prison! The three strikes law was not written to do this but the judges have implemented it that way!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dorian Mode
Emperor Of Earth
06:13 AM on 02/01/2012
That's not true, the third strike has to be a violent felony, Now if you're talking about drug dealers who get life, it's never life without the possibility of parole, So in most states life could be as little as 7 years. If you got life without the possibility of parole you committed a violent felony.
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darter22
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.
09:14 PM on 01/27/2012
But if we just lock up all of the old people, just look at all the money we will save on Medicare and Social Security.
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ywcachieve
President Barack H. Obama supporter.
12:56 PM on 01/29/2012
It costs more to keep them locked up, than what they receive on SS and Medicare.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thinkingwomanmillstone
great, green, globs of greasy grimey GOPerspeak.
09:53 PM on 01/29/2012
ss and medicare don't begin to meet their needs. The prison system just wants to transfer the costs of care to other budgets. There aren't enough facilities on the outside. The whole system needs to be re- evaluated. Just releasing them without a plan is what happened when they switched from state psychiatric hospitals to a community based treatment model for people who have psychiatric illnesses. Of course they didn't build any community based treatment options before they just eliminated the in patient hospitals. Many patients, especially those without a family to go to, who received care in the state hospitals have ended up homeless on the streets..receiving treatment from ER's or in jails. Families are stymied in trying to find adequate treatment, housing and employment for their ill family members. The prisons are trying to do the same thing. This is a cost saving ploy by the prisons...not a concern for the inmates. Let them come up with proper facilities and funding for these programs...otherwise the bureaucrats won't know the true costs of incarcerating people for life. Many prisons are run by for profit corporations...I'm sure they are quite anxious to improve their bottom line with discharging these expensive inmates.
04:52 AM on 02/01/2012
There are no savings here because it's actually more costly to treat them being incarcerrated than if they were out in the public! It's big buisiness going on in tthe prison industry and it's paid by taxpayers whether their state or federal inmates! California is the perfect example! They thought building all of these prisons and having them on Wall Street geeting people to invest in this booming industry would be a money maker which at first was going great until the investors saw the costs of the medical and mental health departments then you couldn't give those stocks away but it was to late to change the laws that they had put in place to fill up the prisons then the feds came inn and told them they had to get the overcrowding under control and now we have state inmates filling up our county jails to and we are still not in full compliance yet because we have medical and mental facilities to build and we have serious financial difficulties! The whole plan backfired here and we looking for ways to do early releases as much as possible!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
08:18 PM on 01/27/2012
Well, pay for them inside or pay for them outside. Which is better? Many I am sure have something to offer and in turn might be hired. From that their keep can be earned. Give it a try. Right now the aging population isn't getting any smaller.
11:38 PM on 01/27/2012
Hired? Young convicts that are released cannot get hired anyplace. Once you have a record it is near impossible, and in todays economy who would hire an old, ill, ex-con?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
09:45 AM on 01/28/2012
This is the problem today, everyone has an attitude. Are you married? Do you have kids? Do you have a brother? Sister? Second chances do count. Everyone has something to offer and respect should be shown regardless.
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Si1ver1ock
the bread of wickedness, the wine of violence
12:49 PM on 01/27/2012
Now that people can't afford college we can convert colleges into prisons. you wouldn't have to worry too much about them escaping, they have to come back for their meds.
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
12:13 PM on 01/27/2012
Time for all the NIMBY people to come out. You want prisoners released, you want want pot legalized and so on. But you want all those issues to be dumped on the cities and for us to deal with them. I am tired of pretend liberals sitting in the suburbs and not willing to deal with reality. Just for the record I would like to see a change and weed made legal but not until everyone shares the burden. This article is a perfect example of the I want weed legal crowd also being the NIMBY crowd. You would deal with the release of elderly prisoners the same way.http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/index.ssf/2012/01/nj_communities_resistant_to_me.html
08:55 PM on 01/27/2012
Thanks for the link. NJ is at least providing lip service to the issue which is a start. Here in the "Free State" (MD), the "IMBY" people are subject to surveillance and no-knock gestapo raids. Big Pharma and the Health Care Industry has a lot of juice in MD (specifically Baltimore) and has no desire for medical mj competition. Combine that with a governor unwilling to expend any political capital as he has lofty, albeit unrealistic, ambitions (presidential aspirant) refusing to even broach the subject and what we're left with is a few obfuscated medical mj bills collecting dust. As for the treatment of the elderly prisoners, it's only humane to accommodate them -- not all of them are Charles Mansons and evil pot smokers.
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
10:45 PM on 01/27/2012
As a person with MS I actually have a personal reason for supporting legalizing weed. I am fortunate in being mobile and stable with some pain that can be treated with exercise and non addictive medicine. But i would like to know if needed it would be there. I also would want it federally regulated and available like any other medicine. I am also tired of the people who always claim support for things as long as it isn't in their community. Most of the people here support their release as long as it isn't into their communities.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madcityy
11:49 AM on 01/27/2012
MAYBE WE NEED TO HANG THEM ALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL
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Si1ver1ock
the bread of wickedness, the wine of violence
12:50 PM on 01/27/2012
Hang 6 million people?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Iamthx1138
06:00 PM on 01/27/2012
Yes.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nypapajoe
11:37 AM on 01/27/2012
I vote they die in prison! They definitely did something against an innocent victim(s) to get put in jail forever! Anybody that wants to volunteer to take them home go right ahead! Let's see how long you or yours remain breathing!
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
11:12 AM on 01/27/2012
Manson is elderly. He should make a lovely nursing home occupant. Just because people get old it doesn't mean they are nice and harmless.
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sunbeltvoter
Teapublican Evangelical Cults ARE The Problem
11:17 AM on 01/27/2012
Ole Charlie has a great future in politics. He is much more honest and sincere than any of the klowns running as Republican candidates for President. He does not flip flop on his philosophy. I'd vote for Charlie long before I'd ever vote for Santorum. Or Gingrich. Or Romney. . .
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
11:42 AM on 01/27/2012
I wouldn't vote for any of them.
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
11:51 AM on 01/27/2012
BTW, he was actually a rightwinger.
11:56 AM on 01/27/2012
Err..., while I agree with your philosophy about just getting old making you harmless as being bunk (heck, a toothless murderer can still shoot you or gum you to dirt sleep ) I think the main thing with Chuck Mansion is he's kept in stir for his own protection? If they were to let him out into free society someone would just wack him, if for nothing else than notoriety?
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
12:01 PM on 01/27/2012
Then that person would go to jail. If they are young then now we have decades of paying for them being in jail. No savings there. Just think, he was actually on the verge of going to the chair.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robnelsong
Dire Wolfman
11:09 AM on 01/27/2012
The New Yorker magazine published a very interesting article about the US prison system, its history, and its uniqueness in the world. A few facts:

(1) In 1980, there were about two hundred and twenty people incarcerated for every hundred thousand Americans; by 2010, the number had more than tripled, to seven hundred and thirty-one.

(2) Every day, at least fifty thousand men—a full house at Yankee Stadium—wake in solitary confinement, often in “supermax” prisons or prison wings, in which men are locked in small cells, where they see no one, cannot freely read and write, and are allowed out just once a day for an hour’s solo “exercise.”

(3) Six million people are under correctional supervision in the U.S.—more than were in Stalin’s gulags.

http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2012/01/30/120130crat_atlarge_gopnik#ixzz1kfwIQIMk
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
heymack
In an insane world, a sane man must appear insane.
11:22 AM on 01/27/2012
There are 1.6 million people in jail in the US.  Your six million people, does that cover paroled individuals because it seems rather high.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robnelsong
Dire Wolfman
11:24 AM on 01/27/2012
I suggest that you read the New Yorker article but I believe that the number includes all persons in the "system" including parolees.
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lsg0013
Putting mayo on Eddie Haskell's sandwich
01:53 PM on 01/31/2012
"According to a US Department of Justice report published in 2006, over 7.2 million people were at that time in prison, on probation, or on parole. That means roughly 1 in every 32 Americans are held by the justice system. According to the International Centre for Prison Studies (ICPS) at King's College London, of that 7.2 million, 2.3 million were in prison." Wikipedia

Hope this helps. :-)
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
11:05 AM on 01/27/2012
I see where this is headed. If you worked for a living you can forget getting into a nursing home or assisted living facility that is subsidized. You better have enough saved to pay the high regular rate, hope you stay healthy enough to stay in your own home, and hope you still have your own home. People who lived their whole lives in projects or on section 8 get priority. Now they will start giving priority to released elderly prisoners. Even veterans are put on a waiting list. So up until we leave this earth we will be supporting the lifestyle of the same people who never or seldom worked. Something is seriously wrong with this system.
11:38 AM on 01/27/2012
The system is dysfunctional, prepare for it's collapse. When something is unsustainable it means it can't go on forever.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
08:44 PM on 01/27/2012
An appropriate [poem to read parallels the anolgy of your suggestion:

The Deacon’s Masterpiece
or, the Wonderful "One-hoss Shay":
A Logical Story
by Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894)

End of the wonderful one-hoss shay.
Logic is logic. That’s all I say.

It's a good poem to read.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michele Bennington
Comfort the Affllicted, Afflict the Comfortable
03:24 PM on 01/28/2012
cute kitty, hope he's fixed, or you'll be stanking...:)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michele Bennington
Comfort the Affllicted, Afflict the Comfortable
03:59 PM on 01/28/2012
There's a waiting list for any kind of access to medical assistance now. If you worked, or didn't every American is elegible for Medicare at age 65. Unless your'e a 1% any nursing home/assisted living center is going to be subsidized....that's what Medicaid/Medicare is for.

Projects are a thing of the past. More and more they are being torn down and the land goes to developers so they can build condos for the yuppies.

I live in a city w/a population close to 1m. The only "projects" left are for Seniors...rather have a bullet in my head than live in one. HUD has been phasing out Section 8 for quite a while now...most all waiting lists are closed and when they do open up people camp out for days for a chance to wait for housing. You may have seen on the news a few months ago about a city opening their waiting list up...scores of people were hurt trying to get on that list.

And just what is an old sick con going to do to anyone? A con has to be close to death in order to be released from prison. (unless they worked for Haley Barbour)

If you're worried about "supporting" whom you deem undesrving...projects, section 8, ex-cons, it'll be cheaper to do it outside of prision.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bergen2
11:01 AM on 01/27/2012
It's a huge problem that has gotten much worse since government began to contract out our prisons to for-profit corporations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
heymack
In an insane world, a sane man must appear insane.
11:22 AM on 01/27/2012
What huge problem is made worse by privatizing prisons?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tomtom2
SomeOligarchs need a good old fashion Vulcan Pinch
11:30 AM on 01/27/2012
More people in prison, the more the prisons charge the State. Those corporations lobby congress to get hard on criminals. Then you get more prisoners because of "get hard on criminals" laws. The cycle is never ending. Rehabilitation would not be profitable in the long run. They need those repeat offenders. That's why they call them "for profit" prisons.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
happyfella73
Bernie For President!
11:30 AM on 01/27/2012
THere is now an incentive to give longer sentences as it turns them a profit. Some judges have already been found guilty of collusion with the for-profit companies and were jailed and de-frocked for receiving kickbacks.