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Psych med use
seen as high in Vt. prisons
http://www.benningtonbanner.com/headlines/ci_6267536
Psych meds use seen as high in Vt. prisons
Associated Press
DAVID GRAM
June 20, 2007
Saturday, June 30
WATERBURY - Seroquel is an anti-psychotic drug designed for people struggling
with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder.
Its possible side effects include high blood sugar, which can lead to diabetes,
and tardive dyskinesia, which manufacturer AstraZeneca describes as
"uncontrollable movements of the face, tongue, or other parts of the body" that
can become permanent.
46 percent on medication
But it has been widely prescribed in Vermont prisons, where about 46 percent of
inmates were on some kind of psychotropic medication last year, a fact seen as
disturbing by prison rights advocates and corrections officials alike.
By the state's own estimates, Vermont has the highest percentage of inmates on
psychotropic medication of any state in the country and the highest number of
inmates getting more than one psychiatric medication. The next-closest state had
24 percent of its inmates on such drugs, state Department of Corrections health
director Dr. Susan Wehry told a legislative committee last year.
Those figures count the full range of psychiatric drugs, everything from
antidepressants to anti-psychotic medications like Seroquel. Because of the
anti-psychotics' greater mind-altering effects and potential side effects, much
of the concern has been focused on them.
Keep them quiet
"The problem in prison is (drugs are) given to a lot of people to quiet them
down," said prison mental health expert Dr. Terry Kupers, a California
psychiatrist. "They're over-prescribed for people who are not psychotic but who
are not sleeping or who are causing disruptions in the prisons," he said.
According to internal Vermont Department of Corrections records obtained through
a freedom of information request by The Associated Press:
* At Southern State Correctional Facility in Springfield, Seroquel was being
given to 74 prisoners - more than 20 percent of the prison's 350 inmates - as of
last July, even though only 38 were classified as "seriously mentally ill."
* Last July's list for the Springfield prison showed 77 more prescriptions had
been written for other anti-psychotic drugs, including Zyprexa, Risperdal and
Abilify.
* At Southeast State Correctional Facility in Windsor, a women's prison, nearly
a third of its inmates were taking Seroquel in the same period.
* The state spent $1.76 million buying drugs for prisoners last year.
Cheaper option
Experts say drugs are often used by prisons instead of more intensive - and
expensive - talk therapy.
"Paradoxically, prisoners are both overmedicated and undermedicated," said David
Fahti, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union's National Prison
Project.
They're undermedicated when prison health authorities won't supply the drugs the
inmates had been prescribed on the outside, Fahti said. "And they're
overmedicated in the sense that often medication is used as a substitute for ...
very staff-intensive mental health treatment," he added.
The ACLU often goes to bat for prisoners who complain they're not being given
the drugs they need. Rarely if ever does it get a case of a prisoner medicated
against his or her will, Fahti said.
One former prisoner, a 34-year-old man released in April from the Northern State
Correctional Facility in Newport after serving part of a three-to-12-year
sentence for aggravated assault, said he was diagnosed with diabetes after being
put on Seroquel while inside.
"No one in my family has ever had diabetes," said the man, who asked that his
name not be used because he remains on probation and fears he could be sent back
to prison in retaliation for speaking out.
Wehry, a psychiatrist, said the state has been trying to reduce inmates' drug
dependency. She said it introduced a formulary - a list of preferred drugs - in
September, and began requiring special permission for prison health providers to
prescribe Seroquel. Use of that drug is down sharply since then, she said.
She said the high numbers of inmates on psychiatric drugs is less a function of
prisons than of prisoners.
Many arrive with substance abuse problems and soon learn some anti-psychotic
drugs provide "a little buzz," she said in the interview. Many also arrive with
several active prescriptions. "It is not at all uncommon for an offender to come
in on three, four, five, or six medications for similar conditions," Wehry told
lawmakers.
Inmates pressure health providers to prescribe drugs like Seroquel and threaten
to file grievances if denied. "Quite frankly, I think docs get worn down," she
told AP.
In 2004, four Los Angeles psychiatrists wrote the American Journal of Psychiatry
about inmates faking mental illness to get Seroquel, which they would grind up
and snort.
"Such abusive self-administration seems to be driven by (the drug's) sedative
and (anti-anxiety) effects (to help with sleep or to "calm down") rather than by
its anti-psychotic properties," the doctors wrote. "Accordingly, the drug has a
'street value' - it is sold to other inmates for money - and is sometimes
referred to simply as 'quell."'
In the interview, Wehry backed away from the numbers she'd given to lawmakers.
She said exact rankings were hard to obtain, because states differ in which
medications they include when describing prisoners' use of psychotropic drugs.
But she said Vermont is a leader, "in the top five, definitely."
If it's anything close 46 percent - Wehry said this past week that the most
recent quarterly report had 40 percent of Vermont inmates on some type of
psychiatric drug - "that's a very high percentage," said one national expert on
mental health care in prisons.
"The question is why," said Dr. Jeffrey Metzner, a Denver-based psychiatrist who
has studied prison mental health systems around the country, including
Vermont's. "They ought to figure out why."
Wehry said some of the drugs are used "off-label," meaning they are given for
symptoms - such as sleeplessness - for which they weren't originally designed.
Asked whether he considered it good medical practice to give someone Seroquel
for sleep alone, Metzner said no.
With no national numbers ranking of states' use of the drugs, Wehry said she has
had to rely on anecdotal information about other states' practices. From recent
postings on an Internet listserve used by corrections mental health officials,
she offered this sample of percentages of inmates in other states who are
getting any of the broad range of psychiatric drugs:
Alabama, 6 percent; Connecticut, 10 percent; Kentucky, 20 percent; and
Wisconsin, 20 percent.
The new mental hospitals
There's wide agreement that prisons have become the new mental hospitals.
Beginning in the 1960s, state psychiatric hospitals have shrunk or shut down,
with patients released in hopes they would be treated in the community. But
community services have been spotty and chronically short of funds, with many of
the mentally ill left wandering the streets and getting into trouble.
The result, according to a federal Bureau of Justice Statistics report released
last September, is that an estimated 56 percent of inmates in state prisons, 45
percent in federal prisons and 64 percent in county and local jails have some
form of mental illness.
Study is disputed
Metzner disputed that study, saying it relied on self-reporting by inmates and
that the resulting numbers were very high. He said in most U.S. prison systems,
14 to 15 percent of inmates are mentally ill.
Kupers, who has testified as an expert witness for prisoners' rights advocates
in California and other states, said if anti-psychotic drugs are being used too
much in prisons, the solution is in improvements in prison mental health care -
such as talk therapy and daily activities aimed at honing social skills.
"If they're warehousing them in segregation and just giving them pills to quiet
them down, that's not treatment," Kupers said.
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