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Author Notes:

David H. Cloud, Emory University, Rollins School of Public Health, 1518 Clifton Rd, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA. Email: dcloud@emory.edu

David H. Cloud led all aspects of this study as part of his doctoral dissertation. All other authors provided mentorship and contributed to editing and advised on analysis. Mr. Cloud's dissertation is supported a pilot grant from the Lifespan/Brown Criminal Justice Research Training Program on Substance Use and HIV (R25DA037190) and the Livingston Foundation at Laney Graduate School at Emory University.

David H. Cloud led all aspects of this study as part of his doctoral dissertation. All other authors provided mentorship and contributed to editing and advised on analysis. Mr. Cloud's dissertation is supported a pilot grant from the Lifespan/Brown Criminal Justice Research Training Program on Substance Use and HIV (R25DA037190) and the Laney Graduate School at Emory University. The authors thank Katie Rose Quandt, Medha Gosh, and Liz Pittenger for their assistance with data entry. We also thank Jean Casella and Katie Schwartzman for providing access to original survey data. Most importantly, we thank all of the incarcerated people who shared their experiences that made this study possible.

Subjects:

Keywords:

  • Science & Technology
  • Life Sciences & Biomedicine
  • Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
  • Solitary confinement
  • Self -injury
  • Embodiment
  • Dehumanization
  • ADMINISTRATIVE SEGREGATION
  • MASS INCARCERATION
  • PUBLIC-HEALTH
  • UNITED-STATES
  • RISK-FACTORS
  • SUICIDE
  • HARM
  • PREVALENCE
  • ILLNESS
  • RACE

Self-injury and the embodiment of solitary confinement among adult men in Louisiana prisons

Tools:

Journal Title:

SSM-POPULATION HEALTH

Volume:

Volume 22

Publisher:

, Pages 101354-101354

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Solitary confinement is a harrowing human rights and public health problem that is currently inflicted as a routine punishment for a litany of prison rule violations, a reactionary tactic to quell resistance to prison conditions, and as a destination of last resort for people serious mental illnesses (SMI) who are especially vulnerable to its harms. An extensive body of research has documented clusters of psychiatric symptoms—emotional distress, cognitive deficits, social withdrawal, anxiety, paranoia, sleeplessness, and hallucinations—linked to solitary confinement that often manifest in decompensating behaviors, which include self-injury and suicide. This study summarizes the historical evolution of solitary confinement, recaps its linkages to self-injury and suicidality, and offers a theoretical framework grounded in ecosocial theory, and supplemented with concepts from theories of dehumanization and carceral geography. Findings bolster extant evidence on the harms of solitary confinement by focusing on whether and how exertions of power by prison staff to deploy mechanisms of dehumanization—as a pathway between SMI and self-injury among a cross section of adult men (n = 517) exposed to solitary confinement in Louisiana prisons in 2017. Findings reinforce the need for structural interventions that diffuse forms of carceral power and practices that continue to subject people to isolation, dehumanization, and violence.

Copyright information:

© 2023 The Authors

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
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