MIOs are defined as those individuals who required psychiatric hospitalization during their incarceration. These 547 offenders (147 MIOs and 400 non-MIOs) were then followed for 18 months from date of prison discharge. Information on their adjustment came from several sources including correctional data, parole reports, incidence of arrests and dispositions, and rates of psychiatric hospitalization. With the exception of drug offenses, no significant differences were found in the rates or types of rearrests between the two groups. Additionally, rearrest among MIOs was found to be associated with the same standard correlates of crime found in nondisturbed offenders; age and prior criminal record. Policy implications from these findings are discussed. 4 tables and 81 references (Author abstract)
Comparison of the Community Adjustment of Mentally Ill Offenders With Those From the General Prison Population: An 18-Month Followup
NCJ Number
133270
Journal
Law and Human Relations Volume: 15 Issue: 5 Dated: (October 1991) Pages: 477-493
Date Published
1991
Length
17 pages
Annotation
In an effort to understand the relationship between crime and mental illness, mentally ill offenders (MIOs) and those from the general prison population (non-MIOs) are compared on their postprison adjustment.
Abstract