National Institute of Corrections, National Study of Jail Suicide, 2010
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U.S. Department of Justice National Institute of Corrections U.S. Department of Justice National Institute of Corrections 320 First Street, NW Washington, DC 20534 Morris L. Thigpen Director Thomas J. Beauclair Deputy Director Virginia A. Hutchinson Chief, Jails Division Fran Zandi Program Manager National Institute of Corrections www.nicic.gov Lindsay M. Hayes, Project Director National Center on Institutions and Alternatives April 2010 NIC Accession Number 024308 This document was prepared under cooperative agreement number 06J47GJM0 from the National Institute of Corrections, U.S. Department of Justice. Points of view or opinions stated in this document are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice. Contents Foreword .......................................................................................................... vii Acknowledgments ..............................................................................................ix Executive Summary............................................................................................xi Chapter 1. Introduction ...................................................................................... 1 Prior Jail Suicide Research.................................................................................... 2 A Word About Suicide Victim Profiles .................................................................... 3 Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2000................................................................ 4 Chapter 2. National Study of Jail Suicides: 20 Years Later ................................... 7 Methodology: Phase 1......................................................................................... 7 Methodology: Phase 2......................................................................................... 9 Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data ........................................ 11 Personal Characteristics of the Victims ................................................................. 11 Characteristics of the Suicides ............................................................................ 19 Characteristics of the Jail Facilities....................................................................... 32 Chapter 4. Special Considerations ..................................................................... 43 The Changing Face of Jail Suicide ...................................................................... 43 Jail Suicide Rates .............................................................................................. 43 Chapter 5. Conclusion ...................................................................................... 47 Comprehensive Suicide-Prevention Programming................................................... 47 Future Training Efforts ........................................................................................ 53 Data Limitations and Further Research Needed ..................................................... 54 The Continuing Challenge of Prevention............................................................... 54 References....................................................................................................... 55 Appendix A. National Study of Jail Suicides Survey............................................ 59 Appendix B. National Study of Jail Suicides Questionnaire ................................. 61 Contents iii List of Tables Table 1. Sources for Identifying Inmate Suicides in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ...................8 Table 2. Total Number of Suicides Identified in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ........................9 Table 3. Race of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06.......................................12 Table 4. Gender of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06...................................12 Table 5. Age of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06........................................13 Table 6. Marital Status of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ..........................14 Table 7. Most Serious Charge of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06................15 Table 8. Most Serious Prior Charge of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ........16 Table 9. History of Substance Abuse Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ...............................................................................................16 Table 10. History of Medical Problems Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ...............................................................................................17 Table 11. History of Mental Illness Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06...........................................................................................18 Table 12. History of Psychotropic Medication Use Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ...........................................................................18 Table 13. History of Suicidal Behavior Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06...........................................................................................19 Table 14. Month in Which Suicide Occurred in U.S. Jails: 2005–06.......................20 Table 15. Time of Day When Suicide Occurred in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ...................21 Table 16. Length of Confinement Prior to Suicide in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .................22 Table 17. Intoxication of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .............................23 Table 18. Method of Suicide in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .............................................24 Table 19. Instrument Used in Suicide in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ..................................24 Table 20. Anchoring Device Used in Hanging in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .....................25 Table 21. Time Span Between Last Observation and Finding Victim in U.S. Jails: 2005–06............................................................................26 Table 22. Administration of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) to Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .............................................................26 Table 23. Isolation or Segregation at Time of Death for Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06............................................................................27 List of Content Tabless v Table 24. Suicide Precaution Status Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06...................................................................................28 Table 25. No-Harm Contracts Used in U.S. Jails: 2005–06....................................29 Table 26. Qualified Mental Health Professional (QMHP) Assessment of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ..................................................29 Table 27. Suicide Victims’ Last Contact With a Qualified Mental Health Professional (QMHP) in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ..........................................30 Table 28. Suicides Occurring Close to Date of Court Hearing in U.S. Jails: 2005–06............................................................................31 Table 29. Suicides Occurring Close to a Scheduled Court Hearing in U.S. Jails: 2005–06............................................................................31 Table 30. Suicides Occurring Close to a Telephone Call or Visit in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ...........................................................................32 Table 31. Suicides Occurring Close to a Scheduled Telephone Call or Visit in U.S. Jails: 2005–06............................................................................32 Table 32. Intake Screening for Suicide Risk in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .........................33 Table 33. Verification of Suicide Risk During Prior Confinement in U.S. Jails: 2005–06...........................................................................................34 Table 34. Arresting and/or Transporting Officer Opinion About Suicide Risk in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ...........................................................................34 Table 35. Suicide-Prevention Training in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .................................35 Table 36. Frequency of Suicide-Prevention Training in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ..............36 Table 37. Certification in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) in U.S. Jails That Sustained a Suicide: 2005–06......................................................36 Table 38. Suicide Watch Protocol in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ......................................37 Table 39. Authorization To Discharge Inmates From Suicide Watch in U.S. Jails: 2005–06............................................................................38 Table 40. Safe Housing for Suicidal Inmates in U.S. Jails: 2005–06........................39 Table 41. Mortality Review Process in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ....................................40 Table 42. Written Suicide-Prevention Policy in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 .........................41 Table 43. Changing Face of Suicide in U.S. Jails: 1985–86 to 2005–06 ................44 vi National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Foreword This report represents the third collaboration between the National Institute of Corrections and the National Center on Institutions and Alternatives (NCIA) regarding national studies of jail suicide. During the 1980s, two NCIA studies found high rates of suicide in county jails throughout the country. Although suicide continues to be a leading cause of death in jails, the rate of suicide continues to decrease, as demonstrated in this report, National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later. Yet this report does more than simply present a calculation of suicide rates. It presents the most comprehensive updated information on the extent and distribution of inmate suicides through out the country, including data on the changing face of suicide victims. Most important, the study challenges both jail and health-care officials and their respective staffs to remain diligent in iden tifying and managing suicidal inmates. The National Institute of Corrections hopes that this report will encourage continued research, training, and development and revision of comprehensive pre vention programs that are critical to the continued reduction of jail suicide throughout the country. Morris L. Thigpen Director National Institute of Corrections Foreword vii Acknowledgments I would like to acknowledge several individuals for their assistance in completing this national study of jail suicides. Catherine A. Gallagher, Ph.D., Associate Professor at George Mason University’s Justice, Law and Crime Policy Program, was instrumental in the data analysis portion of the project. As she has done on many prior occasions, Alice Boring of the National Center on Institutions and Alternatives (NCIA) brought the report together to its final form. The National Institute of Corrections (NIC) continues to be an advocate for suicide prevention in correctional facilities. NIC provided the funding to NCIA to carry out this study and other national studies on jail and prison suicide. NIC also previously funded NCIA’s Jail Suicide/Mental Health Update, a quarterly newsletter distributed throughout the country at no charge to correctional and health-care administrators, their staff, and other interested persons for more than 20 years. Special thanks are extended to Virginia Hutchinson, Chief of the NIC Jails Division, and Fran Zandi, Correctional Program Specialist in the NIC Jails Division and the program manager who oversaw this project. This project would not have come to fruition without the support of Ms. Hutchinson and Ms. Zandi, who were committed to finding the precious federal dollars necessary to fund the study. I applaud their commitment and appreciate their patience with me in completing this project. Lindsay M. Hayes Project Director National Center on Institutions and Alternatives Acknowledgments ix Executive Summary Suicide continues to be a leading cause of death in jails across the country; the rate of suicide in county jails is estimated to be several times greater than that in the general population. In September 2006, the National Center on Institutions and Alternatives (NCIA) entered into a coop erative agreement with the National Institute of Corrections (NIC) to conduct a national study on jail suicide that would determine the extent and distribution of inmate suicides in local jails (i.e., city, county, and police department facilities) and also gather descriptive data on the demographic characteristics of each victim, characteristics of the incident, and characteristics of the jail facility that sustained the suicide. The study, a followup to a similar national survey that NCIA conducted in 1986, resulted in a report of the findings to be used as a resource tool for both jail person nel in expanding their knowledge base and correctional (as well as mental health and medical) administrators in creating and/or revising policies and training curricula on suicide prevention. The study identified 696 jail suicides in 2005 and 2006, with 612 deaths occurring in detention facilities and 84 in holding facilities. Demographic data were subsequently analyzed on 464 of these suicides. Following are some findings regarding characteristics of the suicide victims: • Sixty-seven percent were white. • Ninety-three percent were male. • The average age was 35. • Forty-two percent were single. • Forty-three percent were held on a personal and/or violent charge. • Forty-seven percent had a history of substance abuse. • Twenty-eight percent had a history of medical problems. • Thirty-eight percent had a history of mental illness. • Twenty percent had a history of taking psychotropic medication. • Thirty-four percent had a history of suicidal behavior. Following are some findings regarding characteristics of the suicides: • Deaths were evenly distributed throughout the year; certain seasons and/or holidays did not account for more suicides. • Thirty-two percent occurred between 3:01 p.m. and 9 p.m. • Twenty-three percent occurred within the first 24 hours, 27 percent between 2 and 14 days, and 20 percent between 1 and 4 months. Executive Summary xi • Twenty percent of the victims were intoxicated at the time of death. • Ninety-three percent of the victims used hanging as the method. • Sixty-six percent of the victims used bedding as the instrument. • Thirty percent of the victims used a bed or bunk as the anchoring device. • Thirty-one percent of the victims were found dead more than 1 hour after the last observation. • Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was administered in 63 percent of incidents. • Thirty-eight percent of the victims were held in isolation. • Eight percent of the victims were on suicide watch at the time of death. • No-harm contracts were used in 13 percent of cases. • Thirty-seven percent of the victims were assessed by qualified mental health professionals; 47 of the victims who committed suicide and were assessed saw a clinician within 3 days of death. • Thirty-five percent occurred close to the date of a court hearing, with 80 percent occurring in less than 2 days. • Twenty-two percent occurred close to the date of a telephone call or visit, with 67 percent occur ring in less than 1 day. Following are some findings regarding characteristics of the jail facilities: • Eighty-four percent were administered by county, 13 percent by municipal, 2 percent by pri vate, and less than 2 percent by state or regional agencies. • Seventy-seven percent provided intake screening to identify suicide risk, but only 27 percent verified the victim’s suicide risk during prior confinement and only 31 percent verified whether the arresting or transporting officer believed the victim was a suicide risk. • Sixty-two percent provided suicide prevention training, but 63 percent either did not provide training or did not provide it on an annual basis. • Sixty-nine percent of training provided was for 2 hours or less, and only 6 percent was for a duration of 8 hours. • Eighty percent provided CPR certification. • Ninety-three percent provided a protocol for suicide watch, but less than 2 percent had the option for constant observation; most (87 percent) used 15-minute observation periods. • Fifty-one percent allowed only mental health personnel to downgrade and discharge inmates from suicide watch. • Thirty-two percent maintained safe housing for suicidal inmates. • Thirty-five percent maintained a mortality review process. • Eighty-five percent maintained a written suicide prevention policy, but suicide prevention pro gramming was not comprehensive. xii National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Twenty years after the survey that was conducted in 1986, this national study of jail suicides found substantial changes in the demographic characteristics of inmates who committed suicide. Some of these changes were stark. For example, suicide victims once characterized as being confined on “minor other” offenses were found in the 2005–06 data to be held on “personal and/or violent” charges. Intoxication was previously viewed as a leading precursor to inmate suicide, yet recent data indicate that it is now found in only a minority of cases. Whereas more than half of all jail suicide vic tims were dead within the first 24 hours of confinement according to 1986 data, current data suggest that less than a quarter of all victims commit suicide during this time period, with an equal number of deaths occurring between 2 and 14 days of confinement. In addition, inmates who committed suicide appeared to be far less likely to be housed in isolation than previously reported and, for unknown reasons, were less likely to be found within 15 minutes of the last observation by staff. Finally, more jail facilities that experienced inmate suicides had both written suicide prevention policies and an intake screening process to identify suicide risk than in years past, although the comprehensiveness of pro gramming remains questionable. In 2006, the suicide rate in detention facilities was 36 deaths per 100,000 inmates, which is approxi In 2006, the suicide rate in mately 3 times greater than that in the general population (Mumola and Noonan 2008). This rate, detention facilities was 36 deaths however, represents a dramatic decrease in the rate of suicide in detention facilities during the past 20 per 100,000 inmates.This rate years. The nearly threefold decrease from a previously reported 107 suicides per 100,000 inmates represents a dramatic decrease in 1986 is extraordinary. Absent indepth scientific inquiry, there may be several explanations for the in the rate of suicide in detention reduced suicide rate. During the past several years, national studies of jail suicide have given a face to facilities during the past 20 years. this longstanding and often ignored public health issue in the nation’s jails. Study findings have been widely distributed throughout the country and were eventually incorporated into suicide prevention train ing curricula. The increased awareness of inmate suicide is also reflected in national correctional stan dards that now require comprehensive suicide prevention programming, better training of jail staff, and more indepth inquiry of suicide risk factors during the intake process. Finally, litigation involving jail suicide has persuaded (or forced) jurisdictions and facility administrators to take corrective actions in reducing the opportunity for future deaths. Therefore, based on this dramatic decrease in the rate of sui cides, the antiquated mindset that “inmate suicides cannot be prevented” should forever be put to rest. This report offers recommendations in the areas of comprehensive suicide prevention programming, staff training, and future research efforts. In conclusion, findings from this study create a formidable challenge for both correctional and healthcare officials as well as their respective staff. Although our knowledge base continues to increase, which has seemingly corresponded to a dramatic reduction in the rate of inmate suicide in deten tion facilities, much work lies ahead. The data indicate that inmate suicide is no longer centralized to the first 24 hours of confinement and can occur at any time during an inmate’s confinement. As such, because roughly the same number of deaths occurred within the first several hours of custody as occurred during more than a few months of confinement, intake screening for the identification of suicide risk upon entry into a facility should be viewed as time limited. Because inmates can be at risk for suicide at any point during confinement, the biggest challenge for those who work in the correc tions system is to view the issue as requiring a continuum of comprehensive suicide prevention services aimed at the collaborative identification, continued assessment, and safe management of inmates at risk for self-harm. Executive Summary xiii Chapter 1. Introduction S uicide continues to be a leading cause of death in jails across the country, where well over 400 inmates take their lives each year (Hayes 2005). Mumola and Noonan (2008) estimate the rate of suicide in county jails to be approximately three times greater than that in the general population. Prior research indicates that most jail suicide victims were young white males who were arrested for nonviolent offenses and were intoxicated upon arrest. Many were placed in isolation and were dead within 24 hours of incarceration (Davis and Muscat 1993; Hayes 1989), although more recent research (Frottier et al. 2002) found that jail inmates are at a higher risk for suicide at both 24 to 48 hours and after 60 days of confinement. The overwhelm ing majority of victims were found hanging by either bedding or clothing. Most victims were not adequately screened for potentially suicidal behavior upon entry into the jail (Hayes 1989). A dis proportionate number of suicide attempts involved inmates with mental illness (Goss et al. 2002). Research specific to suicide in urban jail facilities provided some disparate findings. Most victims of suicide in large urban facilities were arrested for violent offenses and were dead within 1 to 4 months of incarceration (DuRand et al. 1995; Marcus and Alcabes 1993). Because of the extend ed length of confinement prior to suicide, intoxication was not always the salient factor in urban jails as it was in other types of jail facilities. Characteristics such as age, race, gender, method, and instrument used were generally consistent in both urban and nonurban jails. The precipitating factors of suicidal behavior in jail are well established (Bonner 1992, 2000; Winkler 1992). Experts theorize that two primary causes for jail suicide exist: (1) jail environ ments are conducive to suicidal behavior and (2) the inmate is facing a crisis situation. From the inmate’s perspective, certain features of the jail environment enhance suicidal behavior: fear of the unknown, distrust of an authoritarian environment, perceived lack of control over the future, isolation from family and significant others, shame of incarceration, and perceived dehumanizing aspects of incarceration. In addition, certain factors are prevalent among inmates facing a crisis situation that could predispose them to suicide: recent excessive drinking and/or drug use, recent loss of stabilizing resources, severe guilt or shame over the alleged offense, current mental illness, prior history of suicidal behavior, and approaching court date. In addition, some inmates simply are (or become) ill equipped to handle the common stresses of confinement. During initial confine ment in a jail, this stress can be limited to fear of the unknown and isolation from family, but over time (including stays in prison) it may become exacerbated and include loss of outside relation ships, conflicts within the institution, victimization, further legal frustration, physical and emotional breakdown, and problems coping in the institutional environment (Bonner 1992). As the inmate reaches an emotional breaking point, the result can be suicidal ideation (i.e., a wish to die without a specific threat or plan), attempt, or completion. Chapter 1. Introduction 1 Although suicide is well recognized as a critical problem in jails, the issue of prison suicide has not received comparable attention, primarily because the number of jail suicides far exceeds the number of prison suicides. Suicide ranks third (behind natural causes and AIDS) as the leading cause of death in prisons (Mumola 2005). Even though the rate of suicide in prisons is consider ably lower than in jails, it still remains greater than the rate in the general population (Hayes 1995). Most research on prison suicide has found that the vast majority of victims are convicted of personal crimes, housed in single cells (often some type of administrative confinement), and have histories of prior suicide attempts and/or mental illness (Daniel and Fleming 2006; He et al. 2001; Patterson and Hughes 2008; Salive, Smith, and Brewer 1989; White and Schimmel 1995). Although normally serving long sentences, most victims commit suicide in the early stages of their prison confinement (New York State Department of Correctional Services 2002) as well as during Suicide ranks third (behind natural causes and AIDS) as the leading cause of death in prisons. earlier stages of disciplinary confinement (Way et al. 2007). Precipitating factors in prison suicide may include new legal problems, marital or relationship difficulties, and inmate-related conflicts (Kovasznay et al. 2004). Finally, an inmate’s suicide is emotionally devastating to the victim’s family and can be financially devastating to the correctional facility (and its personnel) sustaining the death. Many inmate sui cides result in litigation against a state or local jurisdiction alleging that the cause of death was negligence and/or deliberate indifference on the part of facility personnel. Although the plaintiff’s burden to demonstrate liability in these cases remains high (Cohen 2008), several recent federal court jury awards have well exceeded $1 million (Sanville v. Scaburdine 2002; Woodward v. Myres 2003). Prior Jail Suicide Research In February 1988, the National Institute of Corrections released the National Center on Institutions and Alternatives’ (NCIA’s) National Study of Jail Suicides: Seven Years Later (Hayes 1989), which replicated an earlier national survey (And Darkness Closes In . . . A National Study of Jail Suicides) that NCIA conducted in 1981 (Hayes 1983). The 1988 report was a compilation of data gathered on jail suicides that occurred in 1986. About 30 percent of the 1986 suicides took place in holding facilities (which normally detain persons for less than 48 hours) and about 70 per cent took place in detention facilities (which normally detain persons or house committed and/or sentenced offenders for more than 48 hours but less than 2 years). Other findings are as follows: • Seventy-two percent of victims were white. • Ninety-four percent of victims were male. • The average (mean) age of the victim was 30. • Fifty-two percent of victims were single. • Seventy-five percent of victims were detained on nonviolent charges, with 27 percent detained on alcohol and/or drug-related charges. • Eighty-nine percent of victims were confined as detainees. 2 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later • Seventy-eight percent of victims had prior charges, yet only 10 percent were previously held on personal and/or violent offenses. • Sixty percent of victims were intoxicated at the time of incarceration. • Thirty percent of suicides occurred during a 6-hour period between midnight and 6 a.m. • Ninety-four percent of suicides were by hanging. • Forty-eight percent of victims used their bedding as the instrument. • Two out of three victims were in isolation. • Fifty-one percent of suicides occurred within the first 24 hours of incarceration; 29 percent occurred within the first 3 hours. • Eighty-nine percent of victims were not screened for potentially suicidal behavior at booking. • Fifty-two percent of all victims charged with alcohol and/or drug-related offenses died within the first 3 hours of confinement. • Seventy-eight percent of victims who were intoxicated died within the first 24 hours of incarceration; 48 percent died within the first 3 hours. • The suicide rate in detention facilities was projected to be approximately nine times greater than that in the general population. In addition, data from holding facilities include the following: • Forty-six percent of victims were held on alcohol and/or drug-related charges. • Eighty-two percent of victims were intoxicated at the time of their incarceration. • Sixty-four percent of victims died within the first 3 hours. • Ninety-seven percent of victims were not screened for potentially suicidal behavior at booking. Jail facilities that experienced a suicide in 1986 provided suicide prevention programs in only 58 percent of detention facilities and 32 percent of holding facilities. The study did not analyze the quality of these programs. Despite minor variations, findings from the 1988 study were consis tent with NCIA’s 1981 national study of jail suicides (which used 1979 data). Allowing for slight differences in characteristics of jail suicides, most of the key indicators (offense, intoxication, meth od and/or instrument, isolation, and length of incarceration) showed the same value over time. A Word About Suicide Victim Profiles Efforts to prevent suicide in jails are sometimes geared toward quick-fix solutions. These types of approaches (e.g., use of closed-circuit television monitors, use of safety garments, and removal of blankets) are usually attempts to treat only the symptom. Although these tools can be an important part of jail suicide prevention, experts agree that they should never be used in lieu of staff training, intervention, and supervision. Chapter 1. Introduction 3 Suicide victim profiles have also fallen victim to quick-fix, superficial prevention techniques. At times, these profiles are simply a mirror of a jail’s inmate population. Other times they seem to be contradictory. When used without an awareness of potentially suicidal behavior, they are mislead ing. NCIA constructed and released its first victim profile from 1979 jail suicide data; at that time it was equally praised and criticized. Although the profile appeared in many training manuals throughout the country, it was maligned because critics claimed it allowed jail personnel to believe that profiles can predict and thus prevent suicides. Further, critics charged that many of the charac teristics appearing in the suicide profile fit those of a typical jail inmate and, therefore, such a pro file was useless as a predictive tool. The primary objective of NCIA’s report—to help jail personnel become sensitive to the characteristics or variables that appear most often in jail suicide victims— became lost in the controversy. Quick-fix advocates embraced NCIA’s profile, while foes argued that “not all jail suicides occur on Saturday nights in September.” Both camps missed the point. Demographic victim profiles cannot predict suicide risk; jail officials have been warned that these profiles should only be used to help correctional personnel understand the general risk of sui cide for those in custody (Hayes 1989; Winter 2003). As stated by Farmer and colleagues: “In predicting who will be at risk over time, factors such as mental disorders, prior psychiatric hospi talizations, prior suicidal and self-destructive acts, substance abuse, and ongoing stressors may eventually prove to be more useful danger signals than demographic variables such as age, race, and gender” (Farmer, Felthous, and Holzer 1996:246). That is, a demographic profile of suicide victims should not be viewed as a “death certificate” for all inmates in the nation’s jails, nor should jail personnel ignore those inmates who exhibit suicidal tendencies but do not fit within certain demographic variables. The fundamental goal of a victim profile is to help correctional, medical, and mental health personnel become sensitive to the characteristics that appear most often in jail suicide victims, while at the same time acting as a supplement to the warning signs of potential suicidal behavior. In essence, ignoring obvious signs of potentially suicidal behavior because the individual does not fit the profile is not only foolish, but also negligent. Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2000 Before 2000, state and local jurisdictions did not have uniform requirements for reporting the cir cumstances surrounding the deaths of inmates in their custody, and some had no system for requir ing such reports. Therefore, the number of individuals who were dying in custody and the causes of death could not be determined. The two national studies of jail suicides that NCIA released in 1981 and 1988 provided the only data regarding the extent and scope of inmate suicides throughout the country. Signed into law on October 13, 2000, the Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2000 (Public Law 106–297) requires each state that receives prison construction funding under the federal truth-in sentencing incentive grant program to “report, on a quarterly basis, information regarding the death of any person who is in the process of arrest, is en route to be incarcerated, or is incarcerat ed at a municipal or county jail, state prison, or other local or state correctional facility (including any juvenile facility) that, at a minimum, includes (a) the name, gender, race, ethnicity, and age of 4 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later the deceased; (b) the date, time, and location of death, and (c) a brief description of the circum stances surrounding the death.” The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) is responsible for collecting and analyzing the data, and implemented the Act over a 4-year period. Data collection on deaths in local jail facilities began in 2000, followed by collection from state prisons in 2001. In 2002, BJS began collecting records of deaths from all state juvenile correctional systems, and in 2003, it began collecting data on arrest-related deaths involving approximately 17,784 state and local law enforcement agencies throughout the country. BJS requests data quarterly and reports it annually. According to the most recent BJS data, 277 inmate suicides occurred in more than 3,000 jail facilities in 2006 (Mumola and Noonan 2008).1 The suicide rate in these jails was calculated to be 36 deaths per 100,000 inmates. During the period 2000–06, the BJS data found that 92 percent of jail suicide victims were male, 70 percent were white, and most were 25 to 44 years old. Earlier BJS data (Mumola 2005) found that white jail inmates were six times more likely than African-American inmates, and more than three times more likely than Hispanic inmates, to com mit suicide. In addition, male inmates had higher rates of suicide than female inmates, and violent offenders had a much higher suicide rate than nonviolent offenders. Almost half of the jail suicides occurred during an inmate’s first week in custody (Mumola 2005). 1 For purposes of reporting on the number of deaths in custody, jail facilities excluded law enforcement and police department lockups, privately operated jails, and facilities operated by multiple jurisdictions (e.g., regional jails). In 2003, BJS began survey ing law enforcement and police department lockups to obtain these data, which are not available to date. Chapter 1. Introduction 5 Chapter 2. National Study of Jail Suicides: 20 Years Later H istorically, jail suicides have created publicity, increased public awareness, and ultimately led to litigation against jail facilities, city governments, county commissioners, and others. The past 20 years have produced national studies on inmate suicide, training curricula on suicide prevention in correctional facilities, and revised suicide prevention provisions in national correctional standards that call for increased emphasis on suicide risk inquiry at intake. There is little argument that jail administrators are far more aware of the suicide risk in their facilities today than in years past. Most important are indications that the suicide rate in U.S. jails has fallen sub stantially. In 1988, the National Center on Institutions and Alternatives’ (NCIA’s) national study of jail suicides calculated that there were 107 county jail suicides per 100,000 inmates in 1986, a rate about 9 times greater than that in the general population.2 As stated in chapter 1, the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) recently calculated that in 2006 the suicide rate in these jails was 36 deaths per 100,000 inmates, which is about 3 times greater than that in the general population. Because the last comprehensive national study on jail suicides was conducted more than 20 years ago and BJS data, although useful, are limited to basic demographic information (e.g., age, race, gender, most serious offense, length of confinement), the current study was born out of the belief that a new, comprehensive study regarding the total scope and extent of inmate suicides in jails and lockups throughout the country was long overdue. In September 2006, NCIA entered into a cooperative agreement with the National Institute of Corrections (NIC) to conduct a national study on jail suicides that would determine the extent and distribution of inmate suicides in local jails (i.e., city, county, and police department facilities) and to collect data on the demographic characteristics of each victim, each incident, and the jail facil ity that sustained the suicide. A report of the findings would become a resource tool to help jail personnel expand their knowledge base and help correctional (as well as mental health and medi cal) administrators create and/or revise policies and training curricula on suicide prevention. Methodology: Phase 1 This survey, the third national study that NCIA conducted for NIC (see Hayes 1983 and 1989), was divided into two phases. During phase 1, surveys were mailed to 15,978 facilities across the United States, including 3,173 county jails and 12,805 law enforcement agencies that admin istered short-term lockups. Each respondent was asked to complete a one-page survey if his/her facility sustained one or more suicides in 2005 and/or 2006 (see appendix A). A jail was defined 2 According to Heron and colleagues (2009), the suicide rate in the general population is approximately 11 deaths per 100,000 citizens. Chapter 2. National Study of Jail Suicides: 20 Years Later 7 as any facility operated by a local jurisdiction (e.g., county, municipality), private entity, or multijurisdictional authority whose purpose was to confine individuals primarily apprehended by law enforcement personnel. Per this definition, jails included temporary holding and pretrial detention facilities, lockup facilities that normally detained individuals for less than 72 hours, and facilities that normally detained individuals or housed committed and/or sentenced offenders for more than 72 hours. The definition also included facilities that housed inmates from other jurisdictions (e.g., a state or federal prison system), including privately operated jails and regional jails. Phase 1 surveys were mailed to all jail facilities in July and August 2007. Return business reply envelopes were included in the mailing to ensure a higher rate of return. Further, to help verify data, survey forms were also sent (from September through December 2007) to state medical examiner offices, state and federal jail inspection and/or regulatory agencies, state police/bureau of investigation offices, and private health-care providers that had contracts with county and municipal jurisdictions. Finally, an Internet search engine was used to search newspaper articles on inmate suicides that were not identified through other sources. Phase 1 data identified a total of 696 jail suicides in 2005 and 2006 (366 in 2005 and 330 in 2006). The suicides occurred in 47 states and the District of Columbia.3 Table 1 shows that 383 (55 percent) of the deaths were identified through jail facilities’ self-reports. Data from state inspec tion, investigation, and regulatory agencies showed an additional 177 (25.4 percent) suicides that were not identified through self-reports. Of the remaining deaths, 92 (13.2 percent) were identified through the Internet and newspaper articles, 28 (4.1 percent) through state medical examiner offices, 12 (1.7 percent) through private health-care providers, and 4 (0.6 percent) from other sources.4 Table 1. Sources for Identifying Inmate Suicides in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 SOURCE NUMBER PERCENT Self-report 383 55.0 Inspection, investigation, and regulatory agencies 177 25.4 Internet and newspaper articles 92 13.2 Medical examiners 28 4.1 Private health-care providers 12 1.7 4 0.6 696 100.0 Other Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. 3 No suicides were reported in Alaska, Hawaii, and Vermont. 4 Other sources were from the project director’s expert witness consultation and/or technical assistance to facilities that sustained these deaths. 8 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later It is important to note that “self-report” is the primary category for identifying jail suicide. For example, if a jail suicide was identified by multiple sources, including a self-report from the facility in which the suicide occurred, the source would be attributed to a self-report. Table 1 is intended to reflect a survey respondent’s willingness to self-report an inmate suicide within his/her facility rather than the data collection efforts of state inspection and/or regulatory agencies, state medical examiners, or other organizations. A total of 696 jail suicides were identified during phase 1—in 2005, 324 deaths occurred in de tention facilities and 42 occurred in holding facilities and in 2006, 288 deaths occurred in deten tion facilities and 42 occurred in holding facilities (see table 2). The vast majority (89 percent) of suicides occurred in detention facilities (612 of 696 deaths). Table 2. Total Number of Suicides Identified in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) YEAR DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 2005 42 50.0 324 52.9 366 52.6 2006 42 50.0 288 47.1 330 47.4 Total 84 100.0 612 100.0 696 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Methodology: Phase 2 In phase 1, facilities that experienced one or more suicides in 2005 and/or 2006 were identified. In phase 2, the survey process was initiated, including dissemination of an eight-page survey instrument to facility administrators (see appendix B). The survey instrument was designed to collect the following data: • Demographic characteristics of each victim, including but not limited to age, gender, race, liv ing status, current offense(s), prior offense(s), legal status (detained or sentenced), length of con finement, alcohol and/or drug intoxication at confinement, history of isolation or segregation, room confinement, substance abuse history, medical and/or mental health history, psychotropic medication history, and history of suicidal behavior. • Characteristics of each incident, including but not limited to date, time, and location of suicide; intoxication at time of incident; housing assignment (e.g., single or multiple occupancy, whether the victim was in isolation or segregation and/or on suicide watch); method and instrument used; time span between when the incident occurred and when the victim was found; whether cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and/or an automated external defibrillator were used in emergency response; whether a “no-harm” contract was used prior to the incident; whether the Chapter 2. National Study of Jail Suicides: 20 Years Later 9 victim attended a court hearing, received a visit or telephone call, and/or was assessed by a qualified mental health professional close to the date of the incident; and any possible precipi tating factors to the suicide. • Facility characteristics, including but not limited to facility type; facility ownership (e.g., state, county, private); capacity and/or population when the suicide occurred; and the suicideprevention measures in place at the time of the incident (e.g., written policy, intake screening, staff training in suicide prevention and CPR, observation levels, safe housing, and mortality review). In January 2008, phase 2 survey instruments were initially mailed to facility administrators of the 696 facilities that sustained suicides; 422 surveys were completed and returned. Between March and August 2008, facility administrators who did not respond to the initial survey received a followup letter and a phone call; as a result, an additional 42 surveys were completed and returned. Survey respondents were given the following assurances verbally and in writing: “Data provided will be coded and held in the strictest confidence. Results of this study will be presented in summary fashion, therefore, victim and facility names will not appear in any project report.” Nevertheless, some facility administrators did not cooperate with requests to complete the survey. In September 2008, data collection efforts were concluded with a final response rate of 67 per cent (464 responses out of 696 surveys).5 5 The response rate for this study was lower than the rates from the two earlier studies of jail suicide (82 percent for the 1981 study and 85 percent for the 1988 study). Facility administrators gave several reasons for not fully participating in the study, including ongoing litigation and advice from legal counsel, sensitivity of the subject matter, issues of confidentiality, and time and/or manpower constraints. Some respondents incorrectly stated that completing the survey would violate the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Privacy Rule. In addition, some facility administrators may have decided not to participate in the process because of the time it would have taken to complete the comprehensive eight-page survey instrument. 10 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data A s stated in chapter 2, project staff analyzed data on 464 of the 696 jail suicides identi fied between 2005 and 2006. Demographic findings in this section will be presented in relationship to the type of jail facility. For purposes of this analysis, two facility types were considered: (1) holding facilities (which normally detain individuals for less than 72 hours) and (2) detention facilities (which normally detain individuals or house committed and/or sentenced offenders for more than 72 hours but less than 2 years). Twelve percent (58) of the jail suicides took place in holding facilities and 88 percent (406) took place in detention facilities. Although the data presented in the following tables are categorized by facility type rather than by the juris dictional agency that controls the facility, it is important to note that 84 percent of the suicides occurred in facilities operated by county governments, nearly 13 percent in facilities operated by municipal governments, less than 2 percent in facilities operated by private organizations, and less than 2 percent in facilities operated by multijurisdictional authorities. African-American inmates, who account for nearly the same percentage of the total jail population as whites, constitute a much lower percentage of jail Personal Characteristics of the Victims suicide victims. Race Table 3 shows that approximately two-thirds (67.2 percent) of suicide victims were white, 15.1 per cent were African American, 12.7 percent were Hispanic, and 2.8 percent were American Indian. These percentages are consistent with both the National Center on Institutions and Alternatives’ (NCIA’s) 1988 study (Hayes 1989) and recent Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) data (Mumola and Noonan 2008). More white victims committed suicide in detention facilities than holding facilities and more Hispanic victims committed suicide in holding facilities than detention facilities.6 Of note is that, although white inmates account for about 44 percent of the total jail population throughout the country, they represent the majority (67 percent) of inmates who committed suicide, whereas African-American inmates, who account for nearly the same percentage of the total jail population as whites (39 percent), constitute a much lower percentage of jail suicide victims (15 percent).7 Other recent BJS data also found that white inmates had higher rates of suicide than AfricanAmerican inmates (Mumola 2005). The cause of this disproportionate relationship is outside the purview of this survey. 6 For purposes of this study, differences greater than 10 percent will be considered significant. 7 For comparative data on jail inmates, see Minton and Sabol 2009. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 11 Table 3. Race of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) RACE DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT White 32 55.2 280 68.9 312 67.2 African American 11 19.0 59 14.5 70 15.1 Hispanic 14 24.1 45 11.1 59 12.7 American Indian 1 1.7 12 3.0 13 2.8 Other 0 0.0 10 2.5 10 2.2 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Gender An overwhelming majority (93.1 percent) of the victims were male. The data presented in table 4 are consistent with both NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989) and recent BJS data (Mumola and Noonan 2008). No significant gender differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities. These findings are not surprising because the vast majority of jail inmates throughout the country are male (Minton and Sabol 2009). Table 4. Gender of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) GENDER Male Female Total DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 54 93.1 378 93.1 432 93.1 4 6.9 28 6.9 32 6.9 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. 12 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Age Table 5 shows that more than one-third of all suicide victims (approximately 36 percent) were ages 33 to 42. Only four victims (0.9 percent) were 17 or younger, and the average age was 35. These percentages are slightly higher than those from both NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989) and recent BJS data (Mumola and Noonan 2008). No significant age differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities. Table 5. Age of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) AGE NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT NUMBER COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT ≤17 1 1.7 3 0.7 4 0.9 18–22 5 8.6 55 13.5 60 12.9 23–27 7 12.1 58 14.3 65 14.0 28–32 8 13.8 48 11.8 56 12.1 33–37 12 20.7 72 17.8 84 18.0 38–42 13 22.5 70 17.3 83 17.9 43–47 6 10.3 57 14.0 63 13.6 48–53 5 8.6 21 5.2 26 5.6 ≥53 1 1.7 22 5.4 23 5.0 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Marital Status Forty-two percent of the victims were single, 21.4 percent were married or living in a common-law relationship, and 8.8 percent were divorced (see table 6). The remaining 4.7 percent were either separated or widowed. These percentages are consistent with the findings from NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989). More single inmates committed suicide in detention facilities than holding facilities, and slightly more married inmates committed suicide in holding facilities than detention facilities. No information is available on the marital status of almost one-quarter of all suicide victims, a find ing that might relate to the inadequacy of intake screening at facilities that sustained the suicides. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 13 Table 6. Marital Status of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) MARITAL STATUS DETENTION (>72 hours) NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER Single 19 32.8 176 Married 15 25.9 Common law 4 Separated COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 43.3 195 42.0 74 18.2 89 19.2 6.9 6 1.5 10 2.2 2 3.4 13 3.2 15 3.2 Divorced 4 6.9 37 9.1 41 8.8 Widowed 1 1.7 6 1.5 7 1.5 Unknown 13 22.4 94 23.2 107 23.1 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Most Serious Charge For purposes of this study, the most serious charge was broken down into four offense categories: personal and/or violent, serious property, alcohol and/or drug related, and minor other. Table 7 shows that 43.4 percent of the victims were charged with a personal and/or violent offense(s), followed by minor other (22.5 percent), alcohol and/or drug related (19.0), and serious property (15.1 percent). These data vary widely from the findings of NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989), which showed that suicide victims were fairly evenly distributed across the four offense categories and that personal and/or violent charges accounted for only 24.7 percent of victims. These current data, however, are consistent with other recent BJS data that also found that inmates charged with violent offenses had higher rates of suicide than those charged with nonviolent offenses (Mumola 2005). More inmates charged with alcohol and/or drug-related offenses committed suicide in hold ing facilities than detention facilities and more inmates charged with serious property offenses com mitted suicide in detention facilities than holding facilities. In almost 50 percent of jail suicides, the victims had been charged with one or more of the follow ing offenses: sexual assault and/or murder of a child (32), possession of drugs (27), murder (24), burglary (21), driving while intoxicated (21), rape/sexual assault (20), assault (19), aggravated assault (17), domestic violence (17), and attempted murder (16). The single charge of sexual assault and/or murder of a child was associated with approximately 7 percent of all jail suicides. 14 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Table 7. Most Serious Charge of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) MOST SERIOUS CHARGE NUMBER Personal and/or violent Serious property Alcohol and/or drug related Minor other Total DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 23 39.7 178 43.8 201 43.4 4 6.9 66 16.3 70 15.1 22 37.9 67 16.5 89 19.0 9 15.5 95 23.4 104 22.5 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Notes: “Personal and/or violent” includes murder, negligent manslaughter, armed robbery, rape, sexual assault, indecent assault, child abuse, domestic violence, assault, battery, aggravated assault, kidnapping, and other offenses. “Serious property” includes burglary, grand larceny, auto theft, robbery (other), receiving stolen prop erty, arson, breaking and entering, entering without breaking, vandalism, carrying a concealed weapon and/or firearm, and other offenses. “Alcohol and/or drug related” includes public intoxication, driving while intoxicated, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, possession and/or distribution of controlled dangerous substances, narcotics (unspecified), and other offenses. “Minor other” includes shoplifting, petty larceny, prostitution, sex offenses (other), trespassing, unauthorized use of motor vehicle, traffic offenses (other), violation of probation, contempt of court, vagrancy, indecent exposure, status offenses, escape, forgery, embezzlement, and other offenses. Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Additional Charges and Jail Status Almost 42 percent of inmates who committed suicide had a second current charge filed against them,8 and the overwhelming majority (90.1 percent) of suicide victims were in detention facilities at the time of their death. These percentages are consistent with the findings from NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989). However, these data are quite different from those of inmates who do not commit suicide. Current BJS data indicate that 62 percent of all inmates confined in U.S. jails in 2006 were on detention status (Minton and Sabol 2009). The fact that most inmates who commit ted suicide were on detention status at the time of their deaths may be related to the shorter length of confinement prior to the suicide (see table 16, page 22). Most Serious Prior Charge More than one-third (37.7 percent) of the inmates who committed suicide did not have a history of prior arrests (see table 8). The data also show that 19.6 percent of the victims were charged with a minor other offense, followed by alcohol and/or drug related (19.4 percent), personal and/or violent (16.0 percent), and serious property (7.3 percent). These percentages are some what consistent with the findings from NCIA’s 1988 study, although that study indicated fewer (21.8 percent) victims with no history of prior arrests (Hayes 1989). No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to the most serious prior charge. 8 Data were recorded on only the two most serious charges filed against inmates who committed suicide; more than two charges were filed against only a small percentage of victims. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 15 Table 8. Most Serious Prior Charge of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE MOST SERIOUS PRIOR CHARGE HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Personal and/or violent 8 13.8 66 16.2 74 16.0 Serious property 1 1.7 33 8.1 34 7.3 Alcohol and/or drug related 13 22.4 77 19.0 90 19.4 Minor other 12 20.7 79 19.5 91 19.6 None 24 41.4 151 37.2 175 37.7 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. History of Substance Abuse Nearly 47 percent of inmates who committed suicide were identified during the intake process as having a history of substance abuse (see table 9). Most victims used alcohol, marijuana, synthetic drugs (e.g., methamphetamine, PCP, OxyContin), or multiple illegal drugs. These data are consis tent with available BJS data on substance abuse history among inmates in U.S. jails (Karberg and James 2005). No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to substance abuse. No information is available on the substance abuse history of approximately 35 percent of all inmates who committed suicide, a finding that might relate to the inadequacy of intake screening in facilities that sustained the suicides. Table 9. History of Substance Abuse Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SUBSTANCE ABUSE HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 29 50.0 188 46.3 217 46.8 No 11 19.0 72 17.7 83 17.9 Unknown 18 31.0 146 36.0 164 35.3 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. 16 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later History of Medical Problems Only 27.6 percent of inmates who committed suicide indicated a history of medical problems (e.g., cardiac issues, seizures, diabetes, hypertension, asthma) during the intake process (see table 10). This is somewhat lower than available BJS data on medical problems among inmates in U.S. jails (Maruschak 2006). Significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to medical problems; holding facilities reported fewer medical problems. No information is available about medical concerns in approximately 30 per cent of all inmates who committed suicide, a finding that might relate to the inadequacy of intake screening in facilities that sustained the suicides. Table 10. History of Medical Problems Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE MEDICAL PROBLEMS HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 5 8.6 123 30.3 128 27.6 No 32 55.2 166 40.9 198 42.7 Unknown 21 36.2 117 28.8 138 29.7 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. History of Mental Illness The research literature on suicide in the general community shows a strong relationship between suicide and mental illness. Although the vast majority of individuals who suffer from mental illness do not commit suicide, it is estimated that more than 90 percent of suicides are associated with mental or addictive disorders and that approximately two-thirds of individuals who commit suicide are depressed at the time of their deaths (Moscicki 2001). Only 38.1 percent of inmates who committed suicide were identified as having a history of mental illness during the intake process (see table 11). Most inmates with mental illness who later commit ted suicide suffered from depression or psychosis.9 The percentage of victims with mental illness was also significantly lower than available BJS data on mental health problems among inmates in U.S. jails. For example, recent BJS data show that 64 percent of jail inmates reported a history of mental health problems and 61 percent reported symptoms of mental health disorders within the past 12 months (James and Glaze 2006). Significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to prior mental illness, with holding facilities reporting far fewer such issues. No information is available about the mental health of approxi mately 30 percent of all inmates who committed suicide. This finding, along with the relatively low 9 Survey respondents did not list the victims’ mental illness according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual III or IV criteria. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 17 reporting rate of mental illness in jail suicide victims (particularly in holding facilities), might relate to the inadequacy of intake screening in facilities that sustained the suicides. History of Psychotropic Medication Nearly 20 percent of inmates who committed suicide took psychotropic medication to treat their mental illness, and most were reported to have taken an antidepressant (see table 12). This is consistent with available BJS data on the use of psychotropic medication by inmates in U.S. jails (James and Glaze 2006). The findings also indicated that approximately 16 percent of all inmates who committed suicide were receiving psychotropic medication at the time of their death. Only slight differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to the use of psychotropic medication. No information is available about the use of psycho tropic medication in approximately 40 percent of all inmates who committed suicide, a finding that might relate to the inadequacy of intake screening in facilities that sustained the suicides. Table 11. History of Mental Illness Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE MENTAL ILLNESS HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 14 24.1 163 40.1 177 38.1 No 23 39.7 123 30.3 146 31.5 Unknown 21 36.2 120 29.6 141 30.4 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Table 12. History of Psychotropic Medication Use Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE PSYCHOTROPIC MEDICATION HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 7 12.0 85 20.9 92 19.8 No 19 32.8 169 41.7 188 40.5 Unknown 32 55.2 152 37.4 184 39.7 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. 18 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later History of Suicidal Behavior The research literature on suicide in jails shows a strong relationship between suicide and a history of suicidal behavior. A history of suicide attempts has consistently been shown to be one of the strongest risk factors for completed suicides (Moscicki 2001). Although the vast majority of indi viduals who think about suicide and/or engage in suicidal behavior do not commit suicide, it is estimated that 20 to 50 percent of individuals who commit suicide made a previous attempt to do so (American Foundation for Suicide Prevention 2009). Only 33.8 percent of inmates who committed suicide reported a history of suicidal behavior during the intake process (see table 13). The percentage of victims who had a history of sui cidal behavior is significantly higher than available BJS data on prior suicidal behavior among inmates in U.S. jails (James and Glaze 2006). Recent BJS data indicate that only 13 percent of jail inmates reported one or more suicide attempts within the past 12 months (James and Glaze 2006). Significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to prior suicidal behavior, with holding facilities reporting far less behavior. No information is available on the prior suicidal behavior of approximately 24 percent of all inmates who committed suicide; this finding, along with the relatively low identification of prior suicidal behavior in jail suicide victims, might relate to the inadequacy of intake screening in facilities that sustained the suicides. Table 13. History of Suicidal Behavior Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SUICIDAL BEHAVIOR HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 11 19.0 146 36.0 157 33.8 No 29 50.0 168 41.4 197 42.5 Unknown 18 31.0 92 22.6 110 23.7 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Characteristics of the Suicides Date Fifty-two percent (240) of the suicides occurred in 2005 and 48 percent (224) occurred in 2006. The suicides were fairly evenly distributed throughout the year, although more than 22 percent occurred in July and August (see table 14). This is similar to the findings from NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989). Contrary to common belief, particular seasons and/or holidays did not account for a significantly higher number of suicides, a finding confirmed by other research on suicide in Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 19 Table 14. Month in Which Suicide Occurred in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) MONTH DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER January 6 10.3 32 7.9 38 8.2 February 3 5.2 21 5.2 24 5.2 10 17.4 32 7.9 42 9.1 April 2 3.4 39 8.9 41 8.8 May 5 8.6 36 8.9 41 8.8 June 2 3.4 33 8.1 35 7.6 July 6 10.3 51 12.8 57 12.3 August 4 6.9 43 10.8 47 10.2 September 3 5.2 28 6.9 31 6.7 October 4 6.9 29 7.2 33 7.1 November 6 10.3 31 7.7 37 7.8 December 7 12.1 31 7.7 38 8.2 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 March Total PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. confinement (Fruehwald et al. 2004). No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to month and day of the week in which the suicides took place. Time of Day Experts theorize that inmate suicides occur more often when jail staff perform less frequent super vision. NCIA’s 1988 study generally supported this theory—project staff found that more than 30 percent of all suicides occurred during the 6 hours between midnight and 6 a.m. Results from the current study, however, show that almost one-third (31.9 percent) of all suicides occurred dur ing the 6 hours between 3:01 and 9 p.m. (see table 15). This is consistent with other recent BJS data that also found that the frequency of suicides was fairly evenly distributed throughout the day (Mumola 2005). No significant differences were found between the time of day when suicides occurred in holding and detention facilities. Length of Confinement Prior to Suicide Less than one-quarter (23.4 percent) of all inmates who committed suicide were dead within the first 24 hours of confinement (see table 16). This is in stark contrast to NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989), which found that more than 50 percent of victims were dead within the first 24 hours. This 20 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Table 15. Time of Day When Suicide Occurred in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE TIME OF SUICIDE HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT NUMBER COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 12:01–3 a.m. 8 13.8 55 13.5 63 13.6 3:01–6 a.m. 5 8.6 43 10.6 48 10.3 6:01–9 a.m. 1 1.7 40 9.9 41 8.8 10 17.2 46 11.3 56 12.1 8 13.8 43 10.6 51 11.0 3:01–6 p.m. 10 17.2 65 16.0 75 16.2 6:01–9 p.m. 12 20.7 61 15.0 73 15.7 4 7.0 53 13.1 57 12.3 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 9:01 a.m.–noon 12:01–3 p.m. 9:01 p.m.–midnight Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. current finding, however, is consistent with other recent BJS data regarding length of confinement prior to suicide (Mumola 2005). In addition, whereas NCIA’s prior study found that 15 percent of suicides occurred between 2 and 14 days of confinement, the most recent data indicate that 26.6 percent of the deaths occurred during this same period. However, almost half (44.8 percent) of all inmates who committed suicide in holding facilities in 2005 and 2006 were dead within the first 6 hours of confinement. Although significant, this finding is much lower than NCIA’s 1988 study, which found that 80 percent of suicides in holding facilities occurred within the first 6 hours (Hayes 1989). The availability of better screening to identify suicide risk during the initial booking process is a possible explanation for the variations in time periods prior to suicide between this study and the earlier study. Another explanation may be increased staff awareness through training that emphasized the first few hours of confinement as the highest risk period for suicide. Overall, half (52.3 percent) of all inmates who committed suicide in detention and holding facilities were dead between 2 days and 4 months of confinement (in contrast to 34.5 percent in NCIA’s 1988 study). Intoxication NCIA’s 1988 study found a significant relationship between intoxication and inmate suicide— 60 percent of inmates who committed suicide were under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or both at the time of their death. In contrast, the recent data show that only 19.6 percent of all inmates (including 15 percent of detention facility inmates) who committed suicide were intoxicated at the time of their deaths (see table 17). However, more than 50 percent of inmates who committed sui cide in holding facilities were intoxicated at the time of death. This finding is consistent with the Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 21 Table 16. Length of Confinement Prior to Suicide in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE LENGTH OF CONFINEMENT HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER 0–3 hours 14 24.2 23 5.6 37 8.0 4–6 hours 12 20.7 18 4.4 30 6.5 7–9 hours 2 3.4 8 1.9 10 2.1 10–12 hours 1 1.7 11 2.7 12 2.6 13–18 hours 0 0.0 4 0.9 4 0.8 19–24 hours 3 5.2 13 3.2 16 3.4 25–48 hours 5 8.6 40 9.8 45 9.7 11 19.0 112 27.7 123 26.6 15–30 days 1 1.7 25 6.1 26 5.6 1–4 months 4 6.9 89 22.1 93 20.1 5–7 months 1 1.7 29 7.2 30 6.5 8–12 months 0 0.0 15 3.7 15 3.2 >1 year 3 5.2 13 3.2 16 3.4 Unknown 1 1.7 6 1.5 7 1.5 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 2–14 days Total PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. data in table 16, which indicate that fewer inmates committed suicide within the first 24 hours of confinement, the most likely time period in which they would have been intoxicated. Although these findings seem to indicate that most of the inmates who committed suicide were not intoxicated at the time of their deaths, there remains a strong relationship between intoxication and suicide. Intoxication acts as a precipitant of suicidal behavior, and has been consistently linked to impulsive suicides in the general community (Moscicki 2001). Method, Instrument, and Anchoring Device The overwhelming majority (92.7 percent) of inmates who committed suicide chose asphyxiation by hanging as the method (see table 18). No significant differences in the method used were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities. This is consistent with find ings from NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989). Methods listed as “other” included self-strangulation and asphyxiation using a plastic bag. 22 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Table 17. Intoxication of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) INTOXICATION DETENTION (>72 hours) NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER 19 32.7 33 Drugs 8 13.8 Both alcohol and drugs 3 Alcohol Neither alcohol nor drugs Unknown Total COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 8.1 52 11.2 25 6.2 33 7.1 5.2 3 0.7 6 1.3 21 36.2 307 75.6 328 70.7 7 12.1 38 9.4 45 9.7 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. As shown in table 19, two-thirds (66.4 percent) of inmates who committed suicide used their bed ding as the instrument. Clothing (other than shoelaces and belts) was used in 15.5 percent of sui cides. These findings are in contrast to NCIA’s 1988 study, which found that slightly less than half (47.9 percent) of the suicides involved bedding and 34 percent involved clothing (Hayes 1989). Significant differences in regard to the instrument used were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities. Clothing (other than shoelaces and belts) was used in 46.5 per cent of suicides that occurred in holding facilities, but in only 11.1 percent of those that occurred in detention facilities. Bedding was used in 71.2 percent of suicides that occurred in detention facilities, but in only 32.8 percent of those that occurred in holding facilities. It is likely that these differences, which are consistent with findings from NCIA’s 1988 study (Hayes 1989), occurred because holding facilities are less likely to confine individuals overnight and therefore make less use of bedding. More than half of the inmates who committed suicide by hanging used either the bed/bunk (29.6 percent) or bars or cell door (27.0 percent) as the anchoring device (see table 20). Ventilation grates were used in 18.2 percent of the deaths; another study on prison suicide found that ventila tion grates were used in more than 50 percent of deaths by hanging (He et al. 2001). A recently released national study on juvenile suicides in confinement found that door knobs and hinges (21 percent), air vent grates (20 percent), bunk frames and holes (20 percent), and window frames (15 percent) were the anchoring devices used in most suicides that occurred among youth (Hayes 2009). Telephones that have cords of varying length and that are located inside holding and book ing cells also have been used in hanging attempts (Hayes 2003; Quinton and Dolinak 2003). Findings from this study indicate that multiple anchoring devices, however innocuous they may appear, are routinely available to inmates who attempt to commit suicide by hanging. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 23 Table 18. Method of Suicide in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) METHOD NUMBER Hanging DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT NUMBER COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 56 96.6 374 92.1 430 92.7 Overdose 1 1.7 5 1.2 6 1.3 Cutting 0 0.0 6 1.5 6 1.3 Jumping 0 0.0 8 2.0 8 1.7 Ingestion of foreign object 0 0.0 2 0.5 2 0.4 Other 1 1.7 11 2.7 12 2.6 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Table 19. Instrument Used in Suicide in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) INSTRUMENT DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Bedding 19 32.8 289 71.2 308 66.4 Clothing 27 46.5 45 11.1 72 15.5 Shoelace 7 12.1 12 3.0 19 4.1 Belt 1 1.7 5 1.2 6 1.3 Towel 0 0.0 7 1.7 7 1.5 Razor/knife 0 0.0 5 1.2 5 1.1 Drugs 1 1.7 5 1.2 6 1.3 None 0 0.0 7 1.7 7 1.5 Unknown 3 5.2 31 7.7 34 7.3 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. 24 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Time Span Between Last Observation and Finding Victim Nearly 21 percent of suicide victims were found less than 15 minutes after the last observation, and 30.8 percent of victims were found more than 1 hour after the last observation (see table 21). No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to time span. This is different from NCIA’s 1988 study, which found that 42.3 percent of victims were found less than 15 minutes after the last observation and only 11.2 percent were found more than 1 hour after the last observation (Hayes 1989). There is no clear explana tion for these differences in time span between the two studies. Administration of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Almost two-thirds (62.7 percent) of respondents stated that jail staff administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to the victim before medical personnel arrived (see table 22). Jail staff did not administer CPR in the remaining cases because they believed the victim was already dead, were waiting for medical staff to arrive, or did not have training in CPR. This finding is consistent with a recent study of prison suicides, which found that first responders (usually officers) failed to initiate life-saving measures in approximately one-third of cases involving suicide (Patterson and Hughes 2008). In addition, only 35.6 percent of respondents stated that jail or medical personnel used an automated external defibrillator (AED) on the victim. In the majority of cases, staff did not have access to an AED. Table 20. Anchoring Device Used in Hanging in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ANCHORING DEVICE NUMBER PERCENT Bed or bunk 127 29.6 Bars or cell door 116 27.0 Ventilation grate 78 18.2 Shower hardware 16 3.7 Corded telephone 14 3.3 Conduit piping 12 2.8 Light fixture 9 2.1 Window 8 1.8 Shelf/clothing hook 8 1.8 Smoke detector 6 1.3 Other 24 5.6 Unknown 12 2.8 430 100.0 Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 25 Table 21. Time Span Between Last Observation and Finding Victim in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) TIME SPAN DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT <15 minutes 10 17.2 86 21.2 96 20.7 15–30 minutes 12 20.7 91 22.4 103 22.2 30–60 minutes 9 15.5 78 19.2 87 18.8 15 25.9 89 21.9 104 22.4 >3 hours 9 15.5 30 7.4 39 8.4 Unknown 3 5.2 32 7.9 35 7.5 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 1–3 hours Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Table 22. Administration of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) to Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE CPR ADMINISTRATION HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 36 62.1 255 62.8 291 62.7 No 22 37.9 151 37.2 173 37.3 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Housing Assignment At the time of death, approximately 60 percent of inmates who committed suicide were assigned to single-occupancy cells and 40 percent were housed in multiple-occupancy cells. Cellmates were absent from the cells in about two-thirds of the suicides that occurred in multiple-occupancy cells. No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to housing assignment. 26 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Well over one-third (38.4 percent) of inmates who committed suicide were in isolation or segrega tion at the time of their deaths (see table 23), and 29.3 percent of inmates who committed suicide had a history of being placed in isolation or segregation prior to their deaths. Many more inmates who committed suicide in detention facilities were in isolation or segregation than inmates who died in holding facilities (41.1 percent versus 19.0 percent). In contrast, NCIA’s 1988 study found that 67 percent of the victims were held in isolation at the time of their death (Hayes 1989). A possible explanation for the decreased use of isolation for inmates who later committed suicide is increased staff awareness through training that emphasized isolation as a contributing factor to inmate suicides. Table 23. Isolation or Segregation at Time of Death for Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE ISOLATION/ SEGREGATION HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER Yes 11 19.0 167 41.1 178 38.4 No 47 81.0 236 58.2 283 61.0 0 0.0 3 0.7 3 0.6 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Unknown Total PERCENT Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Suicide Precautions Only 7.5 percent of the inmates who committed suicide were on suicide precautions at the time of their deaths (see table 24). No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to suicide precautions. Of the 35 inmates who com mitted suicide while on suicide precautions, 6 were being observed at 30-minute intervals, 24 at 15-minute intervals, 1 at 10-minute intervals, and 4 were under constant observation (including closed-circuit television (CCTV) monitoring). Of the inmates who committed suicide, 29.5 percent had previously been placed on suicide precautions during their current or previous confinement, and some of them were removed from this status shortly before their death. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 27 Table 24. Suicide Precaution Status Among Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SUICIDE PRECAUTION STATUS HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT NUMBER COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 4 6.9 31 7.6 35 7.5 No 54 93.1 375 92.4 429 92.5 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. There may be several reasons why inmates are able to commit suicide while on suicide precau tions: (1) jail staff do not observe the inmate at the required time interval, (2) the inmate is on an observation level that is not commensurate with the level of risk (e.g., an acutely suicidal inmate placed on a 15-minute observation level), (3) the inmate is on an observation level that is not con sistent with national correctional standards (e.g., a 30-minute interval), (4) CCTV monitoring is not reliable, and (5) the inmate is placed in a cell that contains anchoring devices that can be used in a hanging attempt. In fact, because medical experts warn that brain damage from asphyxiation caused by a suicide attempt can occur within 4 minutes and death can occur within 5 to 6 minutes (American Heart Association 1992), observation at 10- or 15-minute intervals is only sufficient under the following conditions—surveillance must be conducted at staggered intervals (e.g., 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 7 minutes) and the cell housing the suicidal inmate must be free of protrusions (Hayes 2006). No-Harm Contracts Mental health clinicians often develop no-harm contracts with potentially suicidal inmates, seeking assurance that their clients will not engage in self-injurious behavior. Correctional facilities may also ask each incoming inmate to sign a no-harm letter as a protection against liability. In truth, however, most legal experts believe that a no-harm contract or letter does not afford legal protec tion to a correctional agency or mental health worker. Although no-harm contracts or letters may be positive in some cases, most clinicians agree that once an inmate becomes acutely suicidal, his or her written or verbal assurances cannot be taken seriously (Thienhaus and Piasecki 1997). The survey questionnaire defined a no-harm contract as “a verbal and/or written agreement between the inmate and facility staff/clinician in which the inmate provides assurances they will not commit suicide or engage in self-injurious behavior.” Table 25 shows that 12.7 percent of the inmates who committed suicide stated that they would not commit suicide or engage in selfinjurious behavior, thus casting significant doubt as to the usefulness of such a contract. 28 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Table 25. No-Harm Contracts Used in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE NO HARM CONTRACTS HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) PERCENT COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 1 1.7 58 14.3 59 12.7 No 51 87.9 317 78.1 368 79.3 6 10.4 31 7.6 37 8.0 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Unknown Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Assessment by a Qualified Mental Health Professional The survey questionnaire defined a qualified mental health professional (QMHP) as “an individual by virtue of their education, credentials, and experience that is permitted by law to evaluate and care for the mental health needs of patients. May include, but is not limited to, a psychiatrist, psychologist, clinical social worker, and psychiatric nurse.” Table 26 shows that 37.1 percent of inmates who committed suicide were assessed by a QMHP prior to their deaths. Because holding facilities do not usually have QMHP staff, significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to a QMHP assessment; a much higher per centage of suicide victims in detention facilities were seen by a QMHP prior to their deaths. Table 26. Qualified Mental Health Professional (QMHP) Assessment of Suicide Victims in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE QMHP ASSESSMENT HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 10 17.2 162 39.9 172 37.1 No 46 79.4 217 53.4 263 56.6 2 3.4 27 6.7 29 6.3 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Unknown Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 29 Among inmates who committed suicide and received a QMHP assessment prior to their deaths, almost half (47 percent) had been assessed within 3 days before their death (see table 27). No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to last contact with a QMHP. Inmates on suicide precautions should be assessed daily for suicide risk (Hayes 2005; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008); however, of the 35 inmates on suicide precau tions at the time of their deaths, only 20 percent had been seen by a QMHP within the previous 24 hours. Table 27. Suicide Victims’ Last Contact With a Qualified Mental Health Professional (QMHP) in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 LAST CONTACT WITH QMHP NUMBER PERCENT <1 day 34 19.7 1–3 days 47 27.3 4–6 days 13 7.6 7–13 days 15 8.8 14–30 days 18 10.4 1–2 months 16 9.4 3–4 months 4 2.3 5–6 months 5 2.9 7–9 months 1 0.6 >1 year 1 0.6 18 10.4 172 100.0 Unknown Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Court Hearing, Telephone Call, and/or Visit Prior to Suicide Although the possible relationship between an inmate suicide and a court hearing, telephone call, and/or visit has not received considerable attention in recent prior research efforts, one earlier study found that approximately 50 percent of suicides in a large urban jail system occurred within 3 days of a court hearing (Marcus and Alcabes 1993). Approximately one-third (34.5 percent) of the inmates who committed suicide attended (or were scheduled to attend) a court hearing close to the date of their deaths (see table 28). The vast majority (80 percent) of the inmates who committed suicide attended (or were scheduled to attend) a court hearing within 2 days of when they committed suicide (see table 29). No 30 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Table 28. Suicides Occurring Close to Date of Court Hearing in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SUICIDE AND COURT HEARING HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 15 25.8 145 35.8 160 34.5 No 39 67.3 207 50.9 246 53.0 4 6.9 54 13.3 58 12.5 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Unknown Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Table 29. Suicides Occurring Close to a Scheduled Court Hearing in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 SCHEDULED COURT HEARING NUMBER PERCENT <1 day 39 24.3 1–2 days 89 55.7 3–7 days 32 20.0 160 100.0 Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. significant differences were found in regard to attendance at a court hearing between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities. Only 21.8 percent of the inmates who committed suicide received a telephone call and/or visit close to the date of their deaths (see table 30). The vast majority (approximately 80 percent) of the events were telephone calls. This variable received nearly 46 percent of “unknown” responses. Approximately two-thirds (67.3 percent) of the inmates who committed suicide and received a telephone call and/or visit died less than 24 hours after the event (see table 31). No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to receiving a telephone call or visit. A significant number of respondents answered “unknown” to survey questions regarding the proximity of the suicide to a court hearing, telephone call, and/or visit. Based on the author’s experience in reviewing inmate suicide cases and mortality reviews, it is likely that these relationships would be proved stronger if jails kept appropriate records. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 31 Table 30. Suicides Occurring Close to a Telephone Call or Visit in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE TELEPHONE CALL OR VISIT HOLDING (0–72 hours) NUMBER DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 16 27.6 85 20.9 101 21.8 No 24 41.4 127 31.3 151 32.5 Unknown 18 31.0 194 47.8 212 45.7 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Table 31. Suicides Occurring Close to a Scheduled Telephone Call or Visit in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 RECEIPT OF TELEPHONE CALL OR VISIT NUMBER PERCENT <1 day 68 67.3 1–2 days 10 9.9 3–7 days 3 3.0 20 19.8 101 100.0 Unknown (but within 7 days) Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Characteristics of the Jail Facilities Type, Administration, Population, and Capacity As stated previously, data were received from 406 detention facilities and 58 holding facilities. County governments administered the vast majority (83.9 percent) of facilities that experienced suicides, followed by municipal governments (12.8 percent), private agencies (1.8 percent), and state or regional governments (1.5 percent). The average population of most detention facilities that sustained suicides was about 550 inmates, whereas holding facilities averaged 5 inmates. Approximately 70 percent of the facilities that experienced suicides were at or under capacity at the time of the inmate suicide, suggesting that overcrowding was not a contributing factor to the deaths. 32 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Identification and/or Screening for Suicide Risk A correctional facility’s suicide prevention efforts must include the screening and assessment of inmates when they enter the facility (Hayes 2005; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008). Although mental health and medical communities agree that no single set of risk fac tors can predict suicide, there is little disagreement about the value of screening and assessment in preventing suicide (Cox and Morschauser 1997; Hughes 1995). Intake screening for all inmates and ongoing assessment of at-risk inmates are critical because research consistently reports that at least two-thirds of suicide victims communicate their intent some time before death, and that an individual with a history of one or more suicide attempts is at a much higher risk for suicide than one who has never made an attempt (Clark and Horton-Deutsch 1992; Maris 1992). Although ide ation, prior attempt(s), and/or other forms of suicidal behavior indicate current risk, other factors such as a recent significant loss, limited prior incarceration, lack of social support system, and vari ous stressors of confinement can also be strongly related to suicide (Bonner 1992). Intake screen ing should include not only questions about current suicidal ideation and prior suicidal behavior, but also questions about the inmate’s suicide risk during any prior confinement in the facility and the arresting and/or transporting officer(s)’ belief that the inmate is currently at risk (Hayes 2005; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008). Table 32 shows that the vast majority (77.1 percent) of respondents reported that they maintained an intake screening process to identify inmates’ suicide risk when they entered the facility; holding facili ties screened for suicide risk to a lesser degree (63.7 percent) than detention facilities (79.1 percent). However, only 27.4 percent of respondents reported that the intake screening process included verification as to whether the newly arrived inmate was on suicide precautions during any prior confinement in the jail facility (see table 33). Table 32. Intake Screening for Suicide Risk in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE INTAKE SCREENING FOR SUICIDE RISK HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 37 63.7 321 79.1 358 77.1 No 21 36.3 85 20.9 106 22.9 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 33 In addition, only 30.6 percent of respondents reported that the intake screening process included verification as to whether the arresting and/or transporting officer(s) believed that the newly arrived inmate was at risk for suicide (see table 34). Table 33. Verification of Suicide Risk During Prior Confinement in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SUICIDE RISK DURING PRIOR CONFINEMENT HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 15 25.9 112 27.6 127 27.4 No 43 74.1 294 72.4 337 72.6 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Table 34. Arresting and/or Transporting Officer Opinion About Suicide Risk in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 ARRESTING AND/OR TRANSPORTING OFFICER OPINION ABOUT SUICIDE RISK FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 18 31.0 124 30.6 142 30.6 No 40 69.0 282 69.4 322 69.4 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Thus, although a high percentage of facilities that sustained inmate suicides had a screening pro cess to identify potentially suicidal behavior at intake, the process was flawed in that most facilities did not verify whether the newly arrived inmate was on suicide precautions during any prior con finement in the jail facility, nor whether the arresting and/or transporting officer(s) believed that the inmate was at risk for suicide. Suicide-Prevention Training The essential component in any suicide prevention program is properly trained correctional staff, who form the backbone of any jail or prison facility. Very few suicides are actually prevented by 34 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later mental health, medical, or other professional staff because suicides usually take place in inmate housing units, often during late evening hours or on weekends when inmates are generally outside the purview of program staff. Therefore, correctional staff who have been trained in suicideprevention techniques and have developed an intuitive sense about the inmates under their care must prevent these incidents. In addition, correctional officers are often the only staff available 24 hours a day and thus form the front line of defense in preventing suicides. However, as with medical and mental health personnel, correctional staff cannot detect, assess, or prevent a suicide without training. Lives are lost and jurisdictions incur unnecessary liability from these deaths when administrators fail to create and maintain effective training programs (Cohen 2008; Hayes 2005). Table 35 shows that the majority (61.8 percent) of respondents reported that they had provided suicide-prevention training to at least 90 percent of their correctional staff, although holding facili ties provided far less training (48.3 percent) than detention facilities (63.7 percent). Table 35. Suicide-Prevention Training in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SUICIDE PREVENTION TRAINING HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) NUMBER PERCENT Yes 28 48.3 No 30 Total 58 NUMBER COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 259 63.7 287 61.8 51.7 147 36.3 177 38.2 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Of the respondents who reported suicide-prevention training, 74.9 percent stated that the training took place yearly. The remainder (25.1 percent) reported that training took place either biennially or on a preservice basis. Holding facilities provided far less annual training (32.2 percent) than detention facilities (79.5 percent). Further, only 6 percent of all reported suicide-prevention training was 8 hours in length. The majority (69 percent) of training was 2 hours or less. No significant dif ferences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to the duration of suicide-prevention training. The combined data in tables 35 and 36 indicate that almost two-thirds (63.3 percent) of all facili ties that sustained a suicide either did not provide suicide-prevention training or did not provide the training annually. Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 35 Table 36. Frequency of Suicide-Prevention Training in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE FREQUENCY OF SUICIDE PREVENTION TRAINING HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yearly 9 32.2 206 79.5 215 74.9 Other 19 67.8 53 20.5 72 25.1 Total 28 100.0 259 100.0 287 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. CPR Certification Following a suicide attempt, the victim’s chances for survival depend on both the level and prompt ness of staff intervention. According to most national correctional standards and practices, a facil ity’s emergency response policy should require all staff to be trained in CPR procedures. The vast majority (80.3 percent) of respondents reported providing CPR training to their correctional staff (see table 37); holding facilities provided slightly less training (70.7 percent) than detention facili ties (81.7 percent). Almost two-thirds (62.7 percent) of respondents stated that their jail staff admin istered CPR to the victim before medical personnel arrived (see table 22, page 26). Table 37. Certification in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) in U.S. Jails That Sustained a Suicide: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE HOLDING (0–72 hours) CPR CERTIFICATION DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 41 70.7 332 81.7 373 80.3 No 17 29.3 74 18.3 91 19.7 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Suicide Watch and Levels of Observation National correctional standards and practices recommend two levels of supervision for suicidal inmates: close observation and constant observation (Hayes 2005; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008). Close observation is appropriate for an inmate who is not active ly suicidal, but who expresses suicidal ideation and/or has a recent prior history of self-harming behavior. Staff should observe these inmates at staggered intervals not to exceed every 10 minutes 36 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later (e.g., 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 7 minutes). Constant observation is appropriate for an inmate who is actively suicidal (i.e., either threatening or engaging in suicidal behavior). Staff should observe these inmates on a continuous, uninterrupted basis. In some jurisdictions, staff use an intermediate level of observation that involves monitoring at staggered intervals that do not exceed 5 minutes. Other aids (e.g., CCTV, inmate companions, or observers) can be used as a supplement to, but never as a substitute for, these observation levels. Table 38 shows that the overwhelming majority (92.7 percent) of respondents reported that they maintained a suicide watch10 protocol (apart from CCTV or an inmate companion11) to provide staff observation of inmates identified as suicidal; holding facilities had such a process to a far lesser degree (69.0 percent) than detention facilities (96.1 percent). One reason why holding facilities reported a lower percentage for suicide watch protocol could be their traditional reliance on CCTV. Table 38. Suicide Watch Protocol in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SUICIDE WATCH PROTOCOL HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 40 69.0 390 96.1 430 92.7 No 18 31.0 16 3.9 34 7.3 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. In addition, although the vast majority of facilities had a suicide watch protocol, only 1.7 percent of respondents reported that constant observation was an option for supervising suicidal inmates. The vast majority (87.2 percent) of inmates on suicide watch were required to be closely observed at 15-minute intervals. No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to the levels of observation provided to suicidal inmates. Slightly more than half (51.2 percent) of the respondents reported that only mental health person nel were authorized to downgrade and discharge inmates from suicide watch (see table 39). In approximately one-quarter (25.4 percent) of the facilities, either medical or mental health person nel were authorized to downgrade and discharge inmates from suicide watch. In a small number (2.2 percent) of facilities, inmates could only be removed from suicide watch when they were released from custody. Significant differences were found between holding and detention 10 For purposes of the survey, “suicide watch” was defined as “the level(s) of direct visual observation by staff that is given to an inmate identified as being at risk of suicide. Excludes closed circuit television, inmate companions/inmate observation aide, or any other non-staff monitoring.” 11 For purposes of the survey, “inmate companion” was defined as “a designation by which another inmate is entrusted with the responsibility of providing observation to an inmate on suicide watch.” Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 37 Table 39. Authorization To Discharge Inmates From Suicide Watch in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE AUTHORIZATION TO DISCHARGE FROM SUICIDE WATCH HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) NUMBER PERCENT 40 68.9 3 0.7 43 9.3 Medical 6 10.3 25 6.1 31 6.7 Mental health 0 0.0 238 58.6 238 51.2 Medical or mental health 3 5.2 115 28.3 118 25.4 All 1 1.8 23 5.7 24 5.2 None 8 13.8 2 0.6 10 2.2 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Correctional NUMBER COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. facilities—most holding facilities (68.9 percent) permitted correctional personnel to downgrade and discharge inmates from suicide watch, presumably because these facilities lacked medical and/or mental health personnel. Holding facilities were also more likely to remove inmates from suicide watch only when they were released from custody. Safe Housing Inmates placed on suicide precautions are frequently housed in unsafe cells containing protrusions (i.e., anchoring devices) that could be used to commit suicide by hanging (Hayes 2005; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008). It is well established that hanging is the method of choice in the overwhelming majority of inmate suicides (Hayes 1989). Although it is impossible to create a “suicide-proof” cell environment in any correctional facility, it is possible to ensure that any cell housing a potentially suicidal inmate is free of all obvious protrusions (Atlas 1989; Hayes 2006). Decisions about the location of cells designated to house suicidal inmates should be based on the ability to maximize staff interaction with those inmates. When possible, suicidal inmates should be housed in the general population unit, mental health unit, or medical infirmary, if avail able, but they should always be located close to staff. As a federal appeals court once stated, “It is true that prison officials are not required to build a suicide-proof jail. By the same token, how ever, they cannot equip each cell with a noose” (Tittle v. Jefferson County Commission 1992). Two-thirds (67.9 percent) of respondents reported that they did not maintain a protocol by which suicidal inmates would be assigned to a safe, suicide-resistant, and protrusion-free cell (see table 40). No significant differences were found between holding and detention facilities in regard to the safe housing of suicidal inmates. 38 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Table 40. Safe Housing for Suicidal Inmates in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE SAFE HOUSING FOR SUICIDAL INMATES HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER Yes 16 27.6 133 No 42 72.4 Total 58 100.0 COMBINED PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT 32.8 149 32.1 273 67.2 315 67.9 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Mortality Review Process Every completed suicide, as well as attempts that require hospitalization, should be examined through a morbidity-mortality review process (Hayes 2005, 2007; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008). If resources permit, a clinical review through a psychological autopsy is also recommended (Aufderheide 2000; Sanchez 2006). Ideally, an outside agency should coordinate the morbidity-mortality review to ensure impartiality. The review (separate from other formal investigations that may be required to determine the cause of death) should include a critical inquiry of the circumstances surrounding the incident, procedures relevant to the incident, all relevant training that involved staff received, pertinent medical and mental health services or reports involving the victim, precipitating factors that may have led to the suicide, and any recom mendations for changes involving policy, training, the physical plant, medical or mental health services, and operational procedures. Table 41 shows that the majority (62.9 percent) of respondents reported that they did not conduct a mortality review following the inmate suicide.12 No significant differences were found between suicides that occurred in holding and detention facilities in regard to the mortality review process, although holding facilities were slightly less likely to conduct a review. Survey respondents were also asked whether any possible precipitating factors (i.e., circumstances that may have caused the victim to commit suicide) were uncovered during the mortality review process. Although mortality reviews were not conducted in most cases, when they did occur, respondents either did not cite any precipitating factors or cited possible factors such as a recent conviction or sentence, fear of transfer to the state prison system, frustration or anger regarding release, death of a family member or friend, lack of family visitation, and ending of a relationship. In addition, several respondents reported poor communication among staff and/or inadequate observation by correctional officers as precipitating factors in the suicides. 12 For purposes of the survey, a “mortality review” was defined as “an interdisciplinary committee process comprised of cor rectional, medical, and mental health personnel that examines the events surrounding the death to determine if the incident was preventable. The review process may include recommendations aimed at reducing the opportunity of future deaths.” Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 39 Table 41. Mortality Review Process in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE MORTALITY REVIEW PROCESS HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 16 27.6 148 36.5 164 35.3 No 42 72.4 250 61.6 292 62.9 0 0.0 8 1.9 8 1.8 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Unknown Total Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. Finally, respondents were asked whether the mortality review process resulted in any recommen dations for corrective action to reduce the likelihood of future suicides. For the cases in which the reviews occurred, respondents either did not cite any recommendations for corrective action or cited actions such as staff being reassigned or fired, increased staff training, revision of the suicide watch process, and revision of the intake screening process. Written Suicide-Prevention Policy The literature is replete with examples of how jail and prison systems have developed effective suicide-prevention programs (Cox and Morschauser 1997; Goss et al. 2002; Hayes 1995, 1998; White and Schimmel 1995). New York experienced a significant drop in the number of jail sui cides following the implementation of a statewide comprehensive prevention program (Cox and Morschauser 1997). Texas saw a 50-percent decrease in the number of county jail suicides and nearly a sixfold decrease in the rate of these suicides from 1986 through 1996; much of it can be attributed to increased staff training and a state requirement for jails to maintain suicideprevention policies (Hayes 1996). One researcher reported no suicides during a 7-year period in a large county jail after suicide-prevention policies were developed based on the following prin ciples: screening; psychological support; close observation; removal of dangerous items from cells; clear and consistent procedures; and diagnosis, treatment, and transfer of suicidal inmates to the hospital as necessary (Felthous 1994). The American Correctional Association (ACA), American Psychiatric Association (APA), and National Commission on Correctional Health Care (NCCHC) are advocates for comprehensive sui cide prevention programs. These organizations have promulgated national correctional standards that are adaptable to individual jail, prison, and juvenile facilities. Although the ACA standards are the most widely recognized throughout the country, they provide limited guidance about sui cide prevention and simply state that institutions should have a written prevention policy that is 40 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later reviewed by medical or mental health staff. ACA’s broad focus on the operation and administra tion of correctional facilities precludes these standards from containing needed specificity. Both the APA and NCCHC standards, however, are much more instructive and offer the following rec ommendations for a suicide prevention program: identification, training, assessment, monitoring, housing, referral, communication, intervention, notification, reporting, review, and critical incident debriefing (American Psychiatric Association 2000; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008). Table 42 shows that the vast majority (84.9 percent) of survey respondents reported that their facilities maintained a written suicide-prevention policy at the time of the suicide, although holding facilities maintained policies to a lesser degree (70.7 percent). Table 42. Written Suicide-Prevention Policy in U.S. Jails: 2005–06 FACILITY TYPE WRITTEN SUICIDE PREVENTION POLICY HOLDING (0–72 hours) DETENTION (>72 hours) COMBINED NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT NUMBER PERCENT Yes 41 70.7 353 86.9 394 84.9 No 17 29.3 53 13.1 70 15.1 Total 58 100.0 406 100.0 464 100.0 Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. However, as stated previously, the quality of the written policies for suicide prevention is question able. For example, although many respondents reported that their facilities maintained an intake screening process to identify the suicide risk of inmates entering the facility, in most facilities the process did not include verification as to whether the arresting and/or transporting officer(s) believed that the newly arrived inmate was at risk for suicide, nor whether the inmate was at risk for suicide during prior confinement. In addition, although the majority of respondents reported that staff in their facilities received suicide-prevention training, most of the training was 2 hours or less in duration. Most surveyed facilities had a suicide watch protocol, but few provided con stant observation. Further, only one-third of respondents reported the availability of protrusion-free housing for suicidal inmates, and most did not provide a mortality review following an inmate suicide. These findings are consistent with a national survey on juvenile suicide in confinement indi cating that although the vast majority of facilities had a written suicide-prevention policy, only 20 percent had written policies encompassing all of the components of a suicide-prevention program (Hayes 2009). Chapter 3. Demographic Findings of Jail Suicide Data 41 Chapter 4. Special Considerations The Changing Face of Jail Suicide The National Center on Institutions and Alternatives’ (NCIA’s) 1981 and 1988 national studies of jail suicide found that, despite a 7-year time interval, demographic data on inmate suicides did not change dramatically. Most of the key characteristics of jail suicide—offense, intoxication, method and instrument, isolation, and length of confinement—remained constant over time (Hayes 1989). Twenty years later, this national study of jail suicides found substantial changes in the demographic characteristics of inmates who committed suicide during 2005–06. Table 43 shows that some of these Previously, more than half changes are stark. For example, suicide victims once characterized as being confined on “minor other” of all jail suicide victims offenses were most recently confined on “personal and/or violent” charges. Intoxication was previously were dead within the first viewed as a leading precipitant to inmate suicide, yet recent data indicate that it is now found in only 24 hours of confinement; a minority of cases. Previously, more than half of all jail suicide victims were dead within the first 24 current data suggest that hours of confinement; current data suggest that less than one-quarter of all victims commit suicide during less than one-quarter of this time period, with an equal number of deaths occurring between 2 and 14 days of confinement. In all victims commit suicide addition, it appears that inmates who committed suicide were far less likely to be housed in isolation during this time period, with than previously reported, yet for unknown reasons it was less likely that they would be found within an equal number of deaths 15 minutes of the last observation by staff. Finally, more jail facilities that experienced inmate suicides occurring between 2 and 14 had both written suicide-prevention policies and an intake screening process to identify suicide risk than days of confinement. in previous years, although the comprehensiveness of programming remains questionable. Jail Suicide Rates Suicide continues to be a leading cause of death among inmates in the nation’s jails. However, a simple question that is routinely asked—“Aside from the number of deaths, what is the jail suicide rate throughout the country?”—often evokes controversy (Lester and Yang 2008; Metzner 2002; O’Toole 2008). Suicide rates are calculated using either average daily population (ADP) or yearly admission data. Many jail administrators would argue that the suicide rate should be calculated based on the total number of inmates who pass through a facility each year, suggesting that each of them is at potential risk of suicide and should be counted. A suicide rate calculated according to yearly admissions would result in a much lower number. For example, few would argue that there would be cause for concern if a 2,000-bed jail experienced 3 inmate suicides during the course of 12 months. If yearly admissions were used to calculate the suicide rate of this jail, and approximately 17,000 inmates passed through the facility each year,13 the rate would be 17.6 deaths per 100,000 inmates. If, however, the ADP was used to calculate the suicide rate, the rate would be 150 deaths per 100,000 inmates. 13 Based on an actual example. Chapter 4. Special Considerations 43 Table 43. Changing Face of Suicide in U.S. Jails: 1985–86 to 2005–06 VARIABLE 1985–86 2005–06 Facility type 70% detention 88% detention Race 72% white 67% white Gender 94% male 93% male Age 30 35 Marital status 52% single 42% single Most serious charge 29% minor other 43% personal and/or violent Jail status 89% detained 91% detained Intoxication at death 60% 20% Time of suicide 30% between midnight and 6 a.m. 32% between 3:01 and 9 p.m. Length of confinement 51% within first 24 hours 23% within first 24 hours Method 94% hanging 93% hanging Instrument 48% bedding 66% bedding Time span between last observation and finding victim 42% found within15 minutes 21% found within15 minutes Isolation 67% 38% Known history of suicidal behavior 16% 34% Known history of mental illness 19% 38% Intake screening for suicide risk 30% 77% Written suicide-prevention policy 51% 85% Source: National Institute of Corrections and National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, National Study of Jail Suicides, 2006. 44 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Historically, suicide rates have been calculated using the ADP. Experts in methodology would argue that yearly admission data are often unreliable (Mumola 2005) and, because the vast majority of individuals spend considerably less time in jail during the year than in the community, it is more appropriate to use the ADP. As previously discussed, the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) has been collecting and analyzing limited inmate suicide data pursuant to the Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2000. Although BJS calculations of suicide rates have previously been based on the ADP, BJS apparently was sensitive to the controversy when it recently wrote that “BJS has usually based jail mortality rates on the average daily population of inmates (an ADP of under 700,000). A more sensitive measure of jail mortality would reflect the far larger number of admis sions into these facilities over the entire year (nearly 13 million). All of these persons admitted are at risk of dying while held in jail” (Mumola 2005:5). BJS began collecting annual admission data on the 50 largest jails “to calculate an at-risk measure of mortality” and found the ADP-based suicide rate for these jurisdictions (29 per 100,000) was 14 times the at-risk suicide rate (2 per 100,000) (Mumola 2005). However, BJS still uses ADP data to calculate the overall suicide rate of jails (excluding holding facilities) throughout the country. According to the most recent BJS data, the suicide rate in jails during 2006 was 36 deaths per 100,000 inmates. These data also suggest that the jail suicide rate has been in decline since the reporting program began in 2000 (Mumola and Noonan 2008). It is important to compare jail suicide rates with the suicide rate in the general population. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) uses general population statistics (not data based on yearly admission or entry into the United States) to calculate the suicide rate in the com munity each year. Thus, to compare the rate of suicide in jail to that in the community, the ADP must be used. The most recent CDC data calculate the suicide rate in the community at 11 deaths per 100,000 citizens (Heron et al. 2009). Based on these data, the jail suicide rate (as calculated by BJS) is approximately three times greater than that in the general population in the community. There are several reasons for the higher rate of suicide in jail. Jail environments are conducive to suicidal behavior and an individual entering a jail is at increased risk of facing a crisis situa tion. From an inmate’s perspective, certain features of the jail environment may enhance suicidal behavior: fear of the unknown, distrust of an authoritarian environment, perceived lack of control over the future, isolation from family and significant others, the shame of being incarcerated, and the perceived dehumanizing aspects of incarceration. In addition, certain factors that are common among inmates facing a crisis situation could predispose them to suicide: recent excessive use of alcohol and/or drugs, recent loss of stabilizing resources, severe guilt or shame over the alleged offense, current mental illness, prior history of suicidal behavior, and approaching court date. Some inmates simply are (or become) ill equipped to handle the common stresses of confinement. Some have argued that jail populations are biased in a number of ways that affect and, perhaps, distort suicide rates. One theorist stated that: “Two of the primary problems that make jails high suicide risk points are their unusual population and the high cyclic rate or the total number of peo ple exposed to a jail in the course of a year” (Stone 1987:84), arguing that there are certain vari ables (including sex, age, marital status, occupational status, and alcoholism) that relate to suicide Chapter 4. Special Considerations 45 in the general population that are predominantly found in jails and, therefore, make such environ ments more suicide prone. In addition, the jail suicide rate “is affected by the ‘cyclic rate’…. What is occurring in jails is that large numbers of a very suicide-prone population are submitted to short periods of stay. You might say that our jails are ‘testing’ the suicide potential of a suicide prone group” (Stone 1987:84). Despite this possible distortion, the examination of suicide rate comparisons enhances our under standing of the jail suicide problem. The 1988 national study of jail suicides calculated 107 suicides per 100,000 inmates in detention facilities in 1986 (based on the ADP in those facili ties); that rate was approximately 9 times greater than the rate in the general population (Hayes 1989).14 NCIA’s most recent national study of jail suicide identified 288 suicides that occurred in detention facilities in 2006. Based on these data, and using the BJS methodology indicating a The increased awareness about national ADP of 755,896,15 there were 38 suicides per 100,000 inmates in detention facilities in the problem of suicide among 2006, and that rate was approximately 3 times greater than the rate in the general population. jail inmates is also reflected in national correctional standards This calculation is consistent with previously reported BJS data and it confirms that there has that now require comprehensive been a dramatic decrease in the suicide rate in detention facilities during the past 20 years. The suicide-prevention programming, nearly threefold decrease from 107 suicides in 1986 to 38 suicides in 2006 is extraordinary. better training of jail staff, and Absent indepth scientific inquiry, there may be several explanations for the reduced suicide rate. more indepth inquiry of suicide During the past several years, NCIA’s prior national studies of jail suicide have given a face to this risk factors during the intake long-standing and often ignored public health issue in the nation’s jails. Findings from the studies process. have been widely distributed throughout the country and were eventually incorporated into suicideprevention training curricula. The increased awareness about the problem of suicide among jail inmates is also reflected in national correctional standards that now require comprehensive suicideprevention programming, better training of jail staff, and more indepth inquiry of suicide risk fac tors during the intake process. Finally, litigation involving jail suicide has persuaded (or forced) counties and facility administrators to take corrective actions in reducing the opportunity for future deaths. Therefore, the antiquated mindset that “inmate suicides cannot be prevented” should for ever be put to rest. 46 14 Rates of suicide in holding facilities were not computed due to the unreliability of average daily population data. 15 See Sabol, Minton, and Harrison 2007. National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Chapter 5. Conclusion T he primary goal of this study was to provide updated data on the extent and distribution of inmate suicides throughout the country, as well as to gather recent descriptive data on the demographic characteristics of each victim, characteristics of the incident, and characteristics of the holding or detention facility that sustained the suicide. To that end, project staff compiled sig nificant data on inmate suicides throughout the country, and it is hoped that these findings can be used as a resource tool for practitioners in expanding their knowledge base and for facility admin istrators in creating and/or revising sound policies and training curricula on suicide prevention. Although the vast majority of Comprehensive Suicide-Prevention Programming facilities that sustained a suicide The findings indicate that, although the vast majority of facilities that sustained a suicide had a written suicide-prevention policy, the comprehensiveness of the program was questionable. For example, even though many respondents reported that their facilities maintained an intake screen had a written suicide-prevention policy, the comprehensiveness of the program was questionable. ing process to identify the suicide risk of inmates entering the facility, the process for most facilities did not include verification as to whether the arresting and/or transporting officer(s) believed that the newly arrived inmate was at risk for suicide, nor whether the inmate was at risk for suicide during prior confinement. In addition, although the majority of respondents reported that their facilities provided suicide-prevention training to staff, most of the training was 2 hours or less in duration. Most surveyed facilities had a suicide watch protocol, but few provided for constant observation. Further, only one-third of respondents reported the availability of protrusion-free hous ing for suicidal inmates and most did not provide a mortality review following an inmate suicide. Consistent with national correctional standards, as well as practices in facilities that have effec tively reduced the opportunity for inmate suicide, all holding and detention facilities (regardless of size and type) must have a detailed, written, suicide-prevention policy that addresses each of the critical components discussed in the following sections (Hayes 2005; Metzner and Hayes 2006; National Commission on Correctional Health Care 2008). Training All correctional, medical, and mental health personnel, as well as any staff who have regular contact with inmates, should receive 8 hours of initial suicide-prevention training and 2 hours of refresher training each year. The initial training should include instruction regarding administra tor and staff attitudes about suicide and how negative attitudes impede suicide-prevention efforts, why correctional facilities’ environments are conducive to suicidal behavior, potential predisposing factors to suicide, high-risk suicide periods, warning signs and symptoms, how to identify suicidal inmates despite a denial of risk, components of the facility’s suicide-prevention policy, and liability Chapter 5. Conclusion 47 issues associated with inmate suicide. The 2-hour refresher training should review the topics dis cussed during the initial training and also describe any changes to the facility’s suicide prevention plan. The annual training should also include a general discussion of any recent suicides and/or suicide attempts in the facility. In addition, all staff who are in contact with inmates should be trained in standard first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) procedures, and all staff should learn how to use the emergen cy equipment located in each housing unit. To ensure an efficient emergency response to suicide attempts, mock drills should be incorporated into both the initial and refresher training for all staff. Identification, Referral, and Evaluation Intake screening and ongoing assessment of all inmates are critical to a correctional facility’s Screening should not be a single suicide-prevention efforts. Screening should not be a single event but a continuous process because event but a continuous process inmates can become suicidal at any point during their confinement, including during initial admis because inmates can become sion into the facility, after adjudication when the inmate is returned to the facility from court, after suicidal at any point during their receiving bad news or after suffering any type of humiliation or rejection, during confinement in confinement. isolation or segregation, and following a prolonged stay in the facility. Intake screening for suicide risk can be included on the medical screening form or it can be a separate form. The screening process should include questions about past suicidal ideation and/ or attempts; current ideation, threat, or a plan to commit suicide; prior mental health treatment or hospitalization; any recent significant loss (e.g., job, relationship, death of family member or close friend); history of suicidal behavior by a family member or close friend; suicide risk during prior confinement; and the arresting and/or transporting officer(s)’ belief that the inmate is currently at risk. Specifically, the suicide screening process should determine the following: • Was the inmate a medical, mental health, or suicide risk during any prior contact and/or confinement in this facility? • Does the arresting and/or transporting officer have any information (e.g., from observed behav ior, documentation from sending agency or facility, conversation with family member) that indi cates the inmate is currently a medical, mental health, or suicide risk? • Has the inmate ever attempted suicide? • Has the inmate ever considered suicide? • Is the inmate being treated for mental health or emotional problems, or has the inmate been treated in the past? • Has the inmate recently experienced a significant loss (e.g., relationship, death of family member or close friend, job)? • Has a family member or close friend ever attempted or committed suicide? • Does the inmate feel there is nothing to look forward to in the immediate future (i.e., is the inmate expressing helplessness and/or hopelessness)? • Is the inmate thinking of hurting and/or killing himself or herself? 48 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later An inmate’s verbal responses during the intake screening process are critically important when assessing the risk of suicide. However, staff should not rely exclusively on an inmate’s statement that he or she is not suicidal and/or does not have a history of mental illness or suicidal behavior, particularly when the inmate’s behavior, actions, or previous confinement in the facility suggest otherwise. The process should also include procedures for referring the inmate to mental health and/or medical personnel for a more thorough and complete assessment. In addition, given the strong association between suicide and placement in isolation or a special housing unit (e.g., disciplinary and/or administrative segregation), any inmate assigned to such a special housing unit should receive a written assessment for suicide risk by medical or mental health staff upon admission to the placement. Finally, findings from this study demonstrate that the majority of suicides do not occur within the first 24 hours of confinement. In addition, various high-risk periods are associated with potentially suicidal behavior, including whether the inmate has an upcoming date for a court hearing and fol lowing a telephone call or scheduled visit. Staff must be aware of these high-risk periods so they can effectively assess inmates’ risk for suicide. Various high-risk periods are Communication suicidal behavior, including The screening and assessment process is one of several tools that can be used to identify suicide whether the inmate has associated with potentially risk in inmates. This process, coupled with staff training, will be successful only if an effective meth an upcoming date for a od of communication is in place at the facility. court hearing and following The inmate may exhibit certain behaviors that indicate a risk of suicide. If these behaviors are uled visit. a telephone call or sched detected and communicated to others, the likelihood of suicide can be reduced. In addition, most suicides can be prevented by correctional staff who establish trust and rapport with inmates, gather pertinent information, and take action. Three levels of communication are important in preventing inmate suicides: • Communication between the arresting and/or transporting officer and correc tional staff. In many ways, suicide prevention begins at the point of arrest. What an arrestee says and how he or she behaves during arrest, transport to the facility, and at intake are crucial in detecting suicidal behavior. The scene of arrest is often the most volatile and emotional time for the individual, and the arresting officer should pay close attention to the arrestee during this time. Suicidal behavior may occur because of the arrestee’s feelings of anxiety or hopelessness, and previous suicidal behavior can be confirmed by family members and/or friends. The arrest ing or transporting officer must communicate any pertinent information about the arrestee’s well being to correctional staff. It is also critically important for correctional staff to maintain open lines of communication with family members, who often have pertinent information about the inmate’s mental health. • Communication among facility staff (correctional, medical, and mental health personnel). Effective management of suicidal inmates depends on communication between the facility’s correctional personnel and other professional staff. Because inmates can become sui cidal at any point during confinement, correctional staff must maintain awareness, share infor mation, and make appropriate referrals to mental health and medical staff. At a minimum, the Chapter 5. Conclusion 49 facility’s shift supervisor should ensure that appropriate correctional staff are properly informed of the status of each inmate placed on suicide precautions. At the end of a shift, the shift super visor should inform the incoming shift supervisor about the status of all inmates on suicide pre cautions. Multidisciplinary team meetings that include correctional, medical, and mental health personnel should occur on a regular basis to discuss the status of inmates on suicide precau tions. Finally, the authorization for suicide precautions, any changes in suicide precautions, and observation of inmates placed on precautions should be documented on designated forms and distributed to appropriate staff. • Communication between facility staff and the suicidal inmate. Facility staff must use various communication skills with the suicidal inmate, including active listening, staying with the inmate if immediate danger is suspected, and maintaining contact through conversation, eye Housing assignments should be based on the ability to maximize staff interaction with the inmate, not on decisions that heighten depersonalizing aspects of confinement. contact, and body language. Correctional staff should trust their own judgment and observa tion of risk behavior and should not let other facility personnel (including mental health staff) convince them to ignore signs of suicidal behavior. Poor communication among correctional, medical, and mental health personnel, as well as with outside entities (e.g., arresting or refer ral agencies and family members) is a common factor in many custodial suicides. A lack of respect, personality conflicts, and boundary issues often lead to problems with communication. Simply stated, facilities that maintain a multidisciplinary approach avoid preventable suicides. Housing When determining the most appropriate housing location for a suicidal inmate, correctional facility officials (with concurrence from medical and/or mental health staff) often tend to physically isolate (or segregate) and sometimes restrain the individual. Although these responses may be convenient for facility staff, they are detrimental to the inmate because isolation escalates a sense of alien ation and further removes the individual from proper staff supervision. Whenever possible, suicidal inmates should be housed in the general population unit, mental health unit, or medical infirmary, and should be located close to facility staff. Further, removal of an inmate’s clothing (excluding belts and shoelaces) and the use of physical restraints (e.g., restraint chairs or boards, leather straps, handcuffs, and straitjackets) should be avoided whenever possible; these measures should only be used as a last resort when the inmate is physically engaging in self-harming behavior. Housing assignments should be based on the ability to maximize staff interaction with the inmate, not on decisions that heighten depersonalizing aspects of confinement. All cells designated to house suicidal inmates should be as suicide resistant as possible, free of all obvious protrusions, and provide full visibility. These cells should contain tamperproof light fixtures along with smoke detectors and ceiling and/or wall air vents that are free of protrusions. In addi tion, the cells should not contain any live electrical switches or outlets, bunks with open bottoms, any type of clothing hook, towel racks on desks or sinks, radiator vents, or any other object that provides an easy anchoring device for hanging. Each cell door should contain a heavy-gauge Lexan (or equivalent grade) clear panel that is large enough to allow staff a full and unobstructed view of the cell interior. Finally, each housing unit in the facility should have an emergency response bag. The bag should contain emergency equipment, including a first aid kit, a pocket 50 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later mask or face shield, a self-inflating resuscitator bag, and a rescue tool (to quickly cut through fibrous material). Correctional staff should ensure that such equipment is in working order on a daily basis. Observation and Treatment Plan Two levels of observation are generally recommended for suicidal inmates: • Close observation is recommended for the inmate who is not actively suicidal but expresses sui cidal ideation and/or has a recent history of self-harming behavior. In addition, an inmate who denies suicidal ideation or does not threaten suicide, but demonstrates other behavior (through actions, current circumstances, or recent history) that could indicate the potential for self-injury, should be placed under close observation. Staff should observe such an inmate in a protrusionfree cell at staggered intervals not to exceed every 10 minutes (e.g., at 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 7 minutes). • Constant observation is recommended for the inmate who is actively suicidal (i.e., either threat ening or engaging in suicidal behavior). Staff should observe such an inmate on a continuous, uninterrupted basis. Some jurisdictions also use an intermediate level of supervision, with obser vation at staggered intervals that do not exceed 5 minutes. Other aids (e.g., closed-circuit television monitors, inmate companions, and cellmates) can be used as a supplement to, but never as a substitute for, these observation levels. Mental health staff should assess and interact with (not just observe) the suicidal inmate daily. The daily assessment should focus on the inmate’s current behavior as well as changes in thoughts and behavior during the past 24 hours. For example, mental health staff can ask the following ques tions: “What are your current feelings and thoughts?”, “Have your feelings and thoughts changed over the past 24 hours?”, and “What are some of the things you have done or can do to change these thoughts and feelings?” An individualized treatment plan (including followup services) should be developed for each inmate on suicide precautions. Qualified mental health staff should develop the plan in conjunction with both the inmate and medical and correctional personnel. The treatment plan should describe signs, symptoms, and the circumstances under which the risk for suicide is likely to recur; how the inmate can avoid having suicidal thoughts; and actions the inmate and staff will take if suicidal ideation recurs. Finally, because of the strong correlation between prior suicidal behavior and suicide, and to safeguard the continuity of care for suicidal inmates, all inmates who are discharged from suicide precautions should remain on mental health caseloads and receive regularly scheduled followup assessments by mental health personnel until they are released from custody. Although there is no nationally accepted schedule for followup, a suggested assessment schedule following discharge from suicide precautions might be: daily for 5 days, once a week for 2 weeks, and then once a month until release. Chapter 5. Conclusion 51 Intervention National correctional standards and practices generally acknowledge that a facility’s policy regard ing intervention should include three components. First, all staff who have contact with the inmate should be trained in standard first aid procedures and CPR. Second, a staff member who discovers an inmate engaging in self-harming behavior should immediately survey the scene to assess the severity of the emergency, alert other staff to call for medical personnel if necessary, and begin standard first aid and/or CPR if necessary. If facility policy prohibits an officer from entering a cell without backup support, the first responding officer should, at a minimum, make the proper noti fication for backup support and medical personnel, secure the area outside the cell, and retrieve the housing unit’s emergency response bag. Third, correctional staff should never presume that the victim is dead, but rather should initiate and continue appropriate lifesaving measures until medical personnel arrive. Finally, although not all suicide attempts require emergency medical intervention, all such attempts do require immediate intervention and assessment by mental health staff. Notification and Reporting In the event of a serious suicide attempt (i.e., one that requires hospitalization for injuries) or a completed suicide, all appropriate officials should be notified through the chain of command. Following the incident, the victim’s family and appropriate outside authorities should be notified immediately. All staff who had contact with the victim before the incident should be required to sub mit a statement that includes any information they may have about the inmate and/or the incident. Critical Incident Stress Debriefing and Mortality-Morbidity Review An inmate suicide is extremely stressful for both staff and other inmates. Staff members who recent ly had contact with the inmate may also feel ostracized by other personnel and administration offi cials. Following a suicide, a correctional officer may experience guilt because he or she might ask, “What if I had made my cell check earlier?” Staff and inmates who are affected by a traumatic event such as inmate suicide should be offered immediate assistance. One form of assistance is critical incident stress debriefing (CISD). A CISD team, composed of professionals trained in crisis intervention and traumatic stress awareness (e.g., police officers, paramedics, firefighters, clergy, and mental health personnel), allows staff and inmates to process their feelings about the incident, develop an understanding of critical stress symptoms, and seek ways of dealing with those symp toms. For maximum effectiveness, the CISD process or other appropriate support services should occur within 24 to 72 hours of the critical incident. Every completed suicide, as well as every serious suicide attempt, should be examined through a mortality-morbidity review process. If resources permit, a clinical review through a psychological autopsy is also recommended. Ideally, an outside agency should coordinate the mortality-morbidity review to ensure impartiality. This review, which is separate and apart from other formal investiga tions that may be required to determine the cause of death, should include the following: • A critical inquiry of the circumstances surrounding the incident. • Facility procedures relevant to the incident. • Relevant training that involved staff received. • Pertinent medical and mental health services or reports involving the victim. 52 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later • Possible precipitating factors that led to the suicide or serious suicide attempt. • Recommendations, if any, for changes in policy, training, physical plant, medical or mental health services, and operational procedures. Future Training Efforts Although findings from this study show that most of the facilities that experienced a suicide provid ed some type of suicide-prevention training to staff, a sizable number (approximately 38 percent) did not offer any training. In addition, almost two-thirds (63.3 percent) of the facilities that expe rienced a suicide either did not provide suicide-prevention training to staff or did not provide the training on an annual basis. Only a handful of facilities provided a full day of suicide prevention training to staff. In addition, as indicated by the report’s findings, many of the demographic characteristics of sui cide victims and characteristics of the incidents have changed dramatically since prior studies. For example, suicide victims previously confined on “minor other” offenses were more recently con Correctional administrators should fined on “personal and/or violent” charges. Intoxication was previously viewed as a leading pre ensure that suicide-prevention cipitant to inmate suicide, yet recent data indicate that this factor is now found in only a minority training curricula are developed of cases. Whereas more than half of all jail suicide victims were previously dead within the first 24 and/or revised to reflect these hours of confinement, current data show that less than one-quarter of all victims commit suicide dur new research findings and that all ing this time period, with an equal number of deaths occurring between 2 and 14 days of confine correctional, medical, and mental ment. In addition, inmates who committed suicide were far less likely to be housed in isolation than health personnel receive regular previously reported, yet for unknown reasons they were less likely to be found within 15 minutes of and comprehensive instruction in the last observation by staff. suicide-prevention methods. For the reasons stated above, correctional administrators should ensure that suicide-prevention training curricula are developed and/or revised to reflect these new research findings and that all correctional, medical, and mental health personnel receive regular and comprehensive instruction in suicide-prevention methods. At a minimum, initial suicide-prevention training should include but not be limited to the following topics: administrator and staff attitudes about suicide and how nega tive attitudes impede suicide-prevention efforts, ways in which correctional facility environments are conducive to suicidal behavior, potential predisposing factors to suicide, high-risk suicide periods, warning signs and symptoms, how to identify suicidal inmates even if they deny they are at risk, components of the facility’s suicide-prevention policy, and liability issues associated with inmate suicide. Annual refresher training should include a review of administrator and staff attitudes about suicide and how negative attitudes impede suicide-prevention efforts, predisposing risk fac tors, warning signs and symptoms, how to identify suicidal inmates despite a denial of risk, and a review of any changes to the facility’s suicide-prevention plan. The annual training should also include a general discussion of any recent suicides and/or suicide attempts in the facility. Holding or detention facility staff will lack the means to both identify and manage suicidal inmates if they have received little or no training in suicide-prevention methods. Lives will continue to be lost and jurisdictions will incur unnecessary liability from these tragic deaths if administrators do not create and maintain effective training programs. Chapter 5. Conclusion 53 Data Limitations and Further Research Needed Project staff mailed survey requests to nearly 16,000 jail facilities in the United States as well as to hundreds of secondary sources (e.g., state medical examiner offices, state and federal jail inspection and/or regulatory agencies, state police and/or bureau of investigation offices, and private health-care providers that have contracts with county and municipal jurisdictions). This mail ing, along with a review of newspaper articles retrieved from Internet search engines, yielded an accounting of jail suicides during 2005 and 2006 that is as accurate as is reasonably possible. However, because of underreporting and a reluctance to share data, it is not certain whether every death was identified. In addition, a sizable number of survey respondents were unable to supply some data and answered “unknown” to several key variables (e.g., substance abuse, medical and mental health, psychotropic medication, and history of suicidal behavior), thus reflecting either inadequate intake screening, inadequate recordkeeping, or a combination of both. Only about one-third of respondents conducted mortality reviews following the suicides; this factor also hin dered data collection efforts. In addition, although this study represented the National Institute of Corrections’ third comprehen sive national survey of inmate suicide, the current findings invite additional research. For example, future research could explore in more detail the reason(s) behind the occurrence of more suicides during the first 2 to 14 days of confinement rather than within the first 24 hours of confinement. This study revealed a possible relationship between suicide and an inmate’s confinement for sexual assault and/or murder of a child (which accounted for approximately 7 percent of all suicides), but additional research is necessary to explain the reasons for this relationship. Further research is also necessary to explore the relationship between the occurrence of inmate suicides and recent court hearings, telephone calls, and visitation, as well as other possible precipitating factors that study respondents could not identify. The identification of precipitating factors to inmate suicide is criti cally important to the field’s further understanding of the problem. The Continuing Challenge of Prevention In conclusion, findings from this study create a formidable challenge for both correctional and health-care officials as well as their respective staffs. Although the knowledge base continues to increase, which seemingly corresponds to a dramatic reduction in the rate of inmate suicide in detention facilities, much work lies ahead. The data indicate that inmate suicide no longer occurs mostly during the first 24 hours of confinement and can occur at any time during an inmate’s con finement. Given that roughly the same number of deaths occurred within the first few hours of cus tody as occurred in more than several months of confinement, information gathered about current suicide risk during intake screening should be viewed as time limited. Because inmates can be at risk at any point during confinement, the greatest challenge for those who work in the correctional system is to view the issue as one that requires a continuum of comprehensive suicide-prevention services aimed at the collaborative identification, continued assessment, and safe management of inmates at risk for self-harm. 54 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later References American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. Clark, D., and S. Horton-Deutsch. 1992. 2009. Risk Factors for Suicide. New York: “Assessment in Absentia: The Value of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. Psychological Autopsy Method for Studying American Heart Association, Emergency Cardiac Care Committee and Subcommittees. 1992. “Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiac Care.” Journal of the American Medical Association 268(16):2172–83. American Psychiatric Association. 2000. Psychiatric Services in Jails and Prisons, 2nd Antecedents of Suicide and Predicting Future Suicides.” In R. Maris, A. Berman, J. Maltsberger, and R. Yufit (eds.), Assessment and Prediction of Suicide. New York: Guilford Press, pp. 144–82. Cohen, F. 2008. The Mentally Disordered Inmate and the Law, 2nd Edition. Kingston, NJ: Civic Research Institute. Edition. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Cox, J., and P. Morschauser. 1997. “A Solution Association. to the Problem of Jail Suicide.” Crisis: The Journal Atlas, R. 1989. “Reducing the Opportunity for Inmate Suicide: A Design Guide.” Psychiatric Quarterly 60:161–71. Aufderheide, D. 2000. “Conducting the Psychological Autopsy in Correctional Settings.” Journal of Correctional Health Care 7:5–36. Bonner, R. 1992. “Isolation, Seclusion, and Psychological Vulnerability as Risk Factors for Suicide Behind Bars.” In R. Maris, A. Berman, J. Maltsberger, and R. Yufit (eds.), Assessment and of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention 18:178–84. Daniel, A., and J. Fleming. 2006. “Suicides in a State Correctional System, 1992–2002: A Review.” Journal of Correctional Health Care 12:24–35. Davis, M., and J. Muscat. 1993. “An Epidemio logic Study of Alcohol and Suicide Risk in Ohio Jails and Lockups, 1975–1984.” Journal of Criminal Justice 21:277–83. Prediction of Suicide. New York: Guilford Press, DuRand, C., G. Burtka, E. Federman, J. Haycox, pp. 398–419. and J. Smith. 1995. “A Quarter Century of Bonner, R. 2000. “Correctional Suicide Prevention in the Year 2000 and Beyond.” Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 30: 370–76. Suicide in a Major Urban Jail: Implications for Community Psychiatry.” American Journal of Psychiatry 152:1077–80. Farmer, K., A. Felthous, and C. Holzer. 1996. “Medically Serious Suicide Attempts in a Jail With a Suicide Prevention Program.” Journal of Forensic Sciences 41:240–46. References 55 Felthous, A. 1994. “Preventing Jailhouse (eds.), Handbook of Correctional Mental Suicides.” Bulletin of the American Academy of Health. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Psychiatry and the Law 22:477–88. Publishing, pp. 69–88. Frottier, P., S. Fruehwald, K. Ritter, R. Eher, J. Hayes, L. 2006. “Suicide Prevention and Schwaerzler, and P. Bauer. 2002. “Jailhouse Designing Safer Prison Cells.” In G. Dear (ed.), Blues Revisited.” Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Preventing Suicide and Other Self-Harm in Prison. Epidemiology 37:68–73. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 167–74. Fruehwald, S., P. Frottier, T. Matschnig, F. Koenig, Hayes, L. 2007. “Reducing Inmate Suicides S. Lehr, and R. Eher. 2004. “Do Monthly or Through the Mortality Review Process.” In R. Seasonal Variations Exist in Suicides in a High- Greifinger (ed.), Public Health Behind Bars: From Risk Setting?” Psychiatry Research 121:263–69. Prisons to Communities. New York: Springer, Goss, J., K. Peterson, L. Smith, K. Kalb, and B. Brodey. 2002. “Characteristics of Suicide Hayes, L. 2009. “Juvenile Suicide in Confine Attempts in a Large Urban Jail System With ment: A National Survey.” Suicide and Life- an Established Suicide Prevention Program.” Threatening Behavior 39:353–63. Psychiatric Services 53:574–79. He, X., A. Felthous, C. Holzer, P. Nathan, and Hayes, L. 1983. “And Darkness Closes In: A S. Veasey. 2001. “Factors in Prison Suicide: One National Study of Jail Suicides.” Criminal Justice Year Study in Texas.” Journal of Forensic Sciences and Behavior 10:461–84. 46(4):896–901. Hayes, L. 1989. “National Study of Jail Suicides: Heron, M., D. Hoyert, S. Murphy, J. Xu, K. Seven Years Later.” Psychiatric Quarterly Kochanek, and B. Tejada-Vera. 2009. “Deaths: 60:7–29. Final Data for 2006.” National Vital Statistics Hayes, L. 1995. “Prison Suicide: An Overview and Guide to Prevention.” The Prison Journal 75:431–56. Hayes, L. 1996. “Jail Standards and Suicide Prevention: Another Look.” Jail Suicide/Mental Health Update 6:9–11. Hayes, L. 1998. “Model Suicide Prevention Programs, Part III.” Jail Suicide/Mental Health Update 8:1–7. Hayes, L. 2003. “A Jail Cell, Two Deaths, and a Telephone Cord.” Jail Suicide/Mental Health Update 11:1–8. Hayes, L. 2005. “Suicide Prevention in Cor rectional Facilities.” In C. Scott and J. Gerbasi 56 pp. 280–92. National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Reports 57(14). Hyattsville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. Hughes, D. 1995. “Can the Clinician Predict Suicide?” Psychiatric Services 46:449–51. James, D., and L. Glaze. 2006. Mental Health Problems of Prison and Jail Inmates. Special Report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics. Karberg, J., and D. James. 2005. Substance Dependence, Abuse, and Treatment of Jail Inmates, 2002. Special Report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics. Kovasznay, B., R. Miraglia, R. Beer, and B. Way. Mumola, C. 2005. Suicide and Homicide in 2004. “Reducing Suicides in New York State State Prisons and Local Jails. Special Report. Correctional Facilities.” Psychiatric Quarterly Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, 75:61–70. Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Lester, D., and B. Yang. 2008. “Calculating Jail Statistics. Suicide Rates: A Rebuttal to Michael O’Toole.” Mumola, C., and M. Noonan. 2008. Deaths in American Jails January/February:45–46. Custody Statistical Tables. Washington, DC: U.S. Marcus, P., and P. Alcabes. 1993. “Character istics of Suicides by Inmates in an Urban Jail.” Hospital and Community Psychiatry 44:256–61. Maris, R. 1992. “Overview of the Study of Suicide Assessment and Prediction.” In R. Maris, A. Berman, J. Maltsberger, and R. Yufit (eds.), Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics. National Commission on Correctional Health Care. 2008. Standards for Health Services in Jails, 8th Edition. Chicago: National Commission on Correctional Health Care. Assessment and Prediction of Suicide. New York: New York State Department of Correctional Guilford Press, pp. 3–22. Services. 2002. Inmate Suicide Report, Maruschak, L. 2006. Medical Problems of Jail Inmates. Special Report. Washington, DC: U.S. 1995–2001. Albany, NY: New York State Department of Correctional Services. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, O’Toole, M. 2008. “Response to David Lester Bureau of Justice Statistics. and Bijon Yang.” American Jails January/ Metzner, J. 2002. “Class Action Litigation in February:48–51. Correctional Psychiatry.” Journal of the American Patterson, R., and K. Hughes. 2008. “Review of Academy of Psychiatry and the Law 30:19–29. Completed Suicides in the California Department Metzner, J., and L. Hayes. 2006. “Suicide Prevention in Jails and Prisons.” In R. Simon and of Corrections and Rehabilitation, 1999 to 2004.” Psychiatric Services 59:676–82. R. Hales (eds.), Textbook of Suicide Assessment Quinton, R., and D. Dolinak. 2003. “Suicidal and Management. Washington, DC: American Hangings in Jail Using Telephone Cords.” Journal Psychiatric Publishing, pp. 139–55. of Forensic Sciences 48:1151–52. Minton, T., and W. Sabol. 2009. Jail Inmates Sabol, W., T. Minton, and P. Harrison. 2007. at Midyear 2008 – Statistical Tables. Special Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2006. Special Report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics. Justice Statistics. Moscicki, E. 2001. “Epidemiology of Completed Salive, M., G. Smith, and T. Brewer. 1989. and Attempted Suicide: Toward a Framework “Suicide Mortality in the Maryland State Prison for Prevention.” Clinical Neuroscience Research System, 1979 Through 1987.” Journal of the 1:310–23. American Medical Association 262:365–69. References 57 Sanchez, H. 2006. “Inmate Suicide and the White, T., and D. Schimmel. 1995. “Suicide Psychological Autopsy Process. Jail Suicide/ Prevention in Federal Prisons: A Successful Mental Health Update 15:5–11. Five-Step Program.” In L. Hayes (ed.), Prison Sanville v. Scaburdine, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Wisconsin, Case No. 99–C–715 (2002). Stone, W. 1987. “Jail Suicide.” Corrections Today December:84–87. Thienhaus, O., and M. Piasecki. 1997. “Assessment of Suicide Risk.” Psychiatric Services 48:293–94. Tittle v. Jefferson County Commission, 966 F.2d 606 (11th Cir. 1992). Way, B., D. Sawyer, S. Barboza, and R. Nash. 2007. “Inmate Suicide and Time Spent in Special Disciplinary Housing in New York State Prison.” Psychiatric Services 58:558–60. 58 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Suicide: An Overview and Guide to Prevention. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Corrections, pp. 46–57. Winkler, G. 1992. “Assessing and Responding to Suicidal Jail Inmates.” Community Mental Health Journal 28:317–26. Winter, M. 2003. “County Jail Suicides in a Midwestern State: Moving Beyond the Use of Profiles.” The Prison Journal 83:130–48. Woodward v. Myres, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois, Case No. 00–C–6010 (2003). Appendix A NATIONAL STUDY OF JAIL SUJCIDES INFORMATION REQUESTED BY: TH£ NATIONAL CENTER ON 1NSTITUTIONS AND ALTERNATJVES ON BEHALF OF THE ATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CORRECTIONS U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTlCE Dear Sheriff: Police Chief and/or Facility Commander, The Natioual Institute of Corrections. U.S. Department of Justice, has requested the National Center on Lnstitutioos and Alternatives (NCIA) .to conduct a national study on jaif suicides. You may recall that a similar comprehensive study was conducted by N JA during the 1980s. With your as istance, the project wil1 utilize colJected on inmate suicides to generate programmatic recommendations to confront this issue. This information can then be employed by your age11cy and others in an effort to reduce the occurrence of future inmate suicides. DATA PROVIDED BY INDIVIDUAL FACILITIES WILL BE CODED AND HELD IN THE STRICTEST CONFIDENCE. RESULTS OF THIS STUDY WILL BE PRESENTED IN SUMMARY FASHION, THUS PREVENTING THE DIRECT LINKAGE OF SPE IFIC DATA TO THE PARTICULAR FACILITY FR.OM WHICH THE INFORMATION ORIGINATED. Data requested for this study (see over) should be limited to jnmate suicides occurring between the two-year period of January t, 2005 thru December 31. 2006. In order to facilitate data compilation, we ask that you utjlize the definif ons provided on the back of this fonn. When this is not possible, please inform us of specific differences in your reporting. For your convenience m submitting the completed form, we ha e enclosed a self-addressed, business reply envelope. We ask that fue completed form be returned within thirty (30) days of its receipt. We also ask that you return the completed form only if you had a suicide(s) during 2005 and/or 2006. If you have any questions regarding completion of this fonn or the study, please feel free to contact Mr. Lindsay M. Hayes of NClA at (508) 33 7-8806 or Jhayesta@msn.com. Thank you for your cooperation . Copies of the final report will be available upon request . Sincerely~ Morris L. Thigpen, Director National Institute of orrections U.S. Justice Department Lindsay M. Hayes, Project Director .ational Center on Institutions and Alternatives Appendix A 59 DEFINITIONS SUICIDE: Any death of an individual w hile in custody of any law enforcement agency resu lting from or leading directly from any self-inflicted act perpetrated by that individual. Further, any incident in which the ind ividual was left in a comatose and/or brain-dead state would be included within this definition. (NOTE: For purposes of this study, an individual who attempted suicide within the facility yet later died enroute to or at the hospital or other health care provider is classified as an inmate suicide and should be reported below.) JAIL: Any facility operated by a local jurisdiction (e.g., county, municipality, etc.), private entity, or multijurisdictional authority whose purpose is the confmement of individuals primarily apprehended by law enforcement personnel. Jails, as defined here, would include temporary holding and pre-trial detention facilities, lockup facilities which normally detain persons for less than 72 hours, as well as facilities which normally detain individuals or have committed/sentenced offenders for more than 72 hours. The definition includes facilities which are housing inmates for another jurisdiction (e.g., state or federal prison system), including privately operated jails and regional jails. QUESTIONS In the spaces provided below, please indicate the TOTAL NUMBER OF INMATE SUICIDES occurring in your facility during the two-year period between JANUARY 1, 2005 THRU DECEMBER 3 1, 2006. Please only complete the fonn if your jail facility had a suicidc(s) during this two-year period. If you have any questions regarding completion of this form or the study, please foci free to contact Mr. Lindsay M. Hayes of NCIA at (508) 33 7-8806 or lhayesta@rnsn.com. 1. Number of inmate suicides between: January 1, 2005 and December 3 I , 2005 _ _ _ __ January 1, 2005 and December 3 1, 2006 _ _ _ __ 2. Which of the following categories best describes your fac ility? (Please only check one category.) a) Facility for committed/sentenced offenders b) Temporary Holding or Pre-Trial Detention Facility (0 to 72 hours) c) Pre-Trial Detention Facility (over 72 hours) d) Other (Specify:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, THE FOLLOWING WILL BE UTILIZED FOR INTERNAL PURPOSES ONLY Completed by (name/title): Name of Facility: Street Address: City, State, Zip: Telephone/E-Mail: ( ) _ _ _ _ _ _ E-Mail :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Please return the completed survey within 30 days of receipt to: NCIA P.O. BOX 111 MANSFIELD, MA 02048 60 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later Appendix B PHASE 2: ATIONAL STUDY OF JAIL SUICIDES NATJONAL CENTER ON INSTITUTIONS AND ALTERNATIVES Acting a Collecting Agent for the NATIO AL INSTITUTE OF ORRECTl NS U.S. DEPARTMENT OP JUSTICE Items contained in this que tionnaire refer to a suicide tl1at occurred in your facility between January 1 2005 and December 31, 2006 as identified during Phase I of the National tudy of Jail Suicides project. Please complete the following qucstion:naire by checking the. appropriate boxes and/or filJing iD the blanks (aod use adl;l.itiorial heets if necessary), Definitions for certain terms used in this questionnaire appear on page 8. DATA PROVIDED WILL BE CODED A D HELD IN THE STRICTEST CONFIDE CE. RESULT OF THIS STUDY WILL BE PRESR TED IN SUMMARY f'ASlUO • THEREFORE, VICTIM AND FACIUTY NAME WILL NOT APPEAR IN ANY PROJECT REPORT. We as'k that you complete and return this questionnaire within 30 days. hould you have any questions or concerns regarding completion of thi que tiom1aire, ple~e contact Lindsay M. Hayes, Project Director, National Center on Institutions and Alternatives (NCIA), P.O. Box It I, M~nsfield, Massachusetts 02048, 508/337-'8 806, e-mail: LHayesta@msn ,com , NAME OF FACILJTY_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _STATE~ - -PART A: PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS OF VICTIM I) Victim's- Name (or any other identifiable notation): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Last 2) Race/Ethnicity: l )_ _Caucasian First (2)_ _ African-American (3 )_ _Hispanic (4) _ _American Indian 8)_ _Otber (Specify_ _ _ _~ (9 _ _ Unknown (2 _ _Female 3) Sex: (l)_ _Male 4 Date-of -Birth: _ / _/_ 5) _M'arit11l Status: (l)_ _Single (2) Married (3 eparated = (4)_ _Di orced or M.t Years-Old (S) _ _Widowed 6)_ _Common-Law Relationship (S)_ _Other ( pecify_ _ _ _ ) 9)_ _lJnknown Please specify Current Charge(s) for which th victim, as cohfined at rime ofsuicide and whether- iccfm \vas bei'ng: Det11ined or had been Sentenced on tbose charge{s). HARGE(S) DETAI ED ( I)_ _ SENTENCED I (2)_ _ (2_ (3)_ _ )_ Did {be victim have a record of Prior Arrests'? (l)_ _Yes (2)_ _No (9)_ _Unknown Appendix B 61 7b) If the vjctim had a prior arrest record, specify the Most Recent Prior Charges. Most Recent Pdor ChBl'ge(s) Date WhaJ was the total Length of Confinement that the victim.bad been U1 your facility prior to their death? (If less than two days, indicate in hours.) 8.) _ _ Hours 9n), _ _Days _ _Months _ _Yeats Did the victim have a histmy of Substance Abuse? ll __ Ye.s (2)_ _ o f9)_ _U11known 9b) If the victim had a history of ubstance abuse, briefly Describe Type of ubstaoce Abuse._ _ _ __ !On Did the victim have a history •Of M~dical Problems'? (l) _ _ Yes (!: _ _No 9)_ _Unknown I Ob) If the victim lhad a history of medical problems, llriefly Describe Type of Medical Problemlj ,_ _ __ I I.a) Did the victim have ai history ofMental Illness? (l) _ _Yes (2 _ _No 9)_ _U1\known If b) r(the victim ihad a history of mental illness, briefly Describe Type ot'Mentul Illness. _ _ _ _ __ I :!.a) Did the ¥ictim have a history of taking Psychotropic Medicatiorl7 (1 12b) Yes ti)_ _No (9)_ _Unknown If the victim had a history of taking psychotro,pic medictition, briefly De~cribe Type of Psychott<,~lic Med.icatioo(s). _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ J1c) Was 1he victim receiving P1$ychotropic Medication during the most recent confinement? (1 _ _Yes 12d 62 (2)_ _No (9)_ _ Unknown If the victim was receiving psychotropic medication during the most recent confinement, briefly Describe Type of Psychotropic Medication ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later I 3a) Did the victim have a history of Suiciditl Behavior? (9)_ _Unknown (2)_ _No ( !)~ _Yes 13b) If the victim had a history of suicidal behavior. briefly Describe S uicidal Behavior._ _ _ _ _ __ 14a) Was the victim ever on Suicide Watch (see defi nition on page 8) in your facility e ither during this confinement or a prior confinement? (2)_ _No ( l )_ _ Yes (9)_ _ Unknown 14b) Lfthe victim had previously bee!) on uicide Watch at any time in yo ur facility, what was the l'ime Span between Discha rge from Suicide Watch and the S uicide, and Briefly De cribe the Circumstances that resulted in Discharge from S uicide Watch ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ J Sa) Did the victim have a history of placement in Isolation or egregation while in your facility? (l)_ _Yes I Sb (2)_ _No (9)_ _Unknown If the victim had a history of placement in isolation or segregi!tion, briefly Describe Ty pe and Circumstances, of £solation or Segregation . · PART 13: SUICIDE INCfDE T CHARACT ERISTIC 16) Whal wa the Date and Time of the victim' s suicide? Date:- -/- -/20017) Time (found): - - - -am What was the Method of suicide and the Instrument used? Method I ) - - -~pm h1strume11t ( 1)_ _Hanging [fTom_ _ _ _ _(bed, vent, etc.)] (2)_ _0 erdose (3)_ _Cuttfog (4}_ _ hooting (S)_ _Jumping (6)_ _11'\gestion ot'Foteign Object(s (0 l )_ _Clothi ng ( peciry type; _ _ _ ___, (02)_ _Belt (08)_ _K.nife (03)_ _ Shoelace (09)_ _Glass (04)_ _Beddfog (I O)_ _Drugs (OS)_ _Telephone ord Specify_ __ (8)_ _0tner (07)_ _Other (Specify_ _ _~ (06· _ _Razor What was the Time Span between the sui cide and find ing the victim? ( 1)_ _Less Than 15 Minutes (2)_ _ Between 15 and 30 Minutes (3)_ _Between 30 and 60 Mi nutes (4)_ _ Between land 3 Hours (S)_ _Greater Than 3 'Hours (9)_ _ Unknown Appendix B 63 19a) At the- time oftbe ulcide, was the victim nder the lt10oence of: ( ! )_ _D rugs (2)_ _Alcohol (3)_ _ Drugs and Alcohol (41_ _Neithcr Drugs o r Alcohol (9 Unknown JOb lf tbe victim was under tl1e ioOuenee of drugs at tlte fi me ofthe su icide, briefly Describe the Typc(s) of Drugs:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 208) A l lhe ,time of the suicide, was the \>1ctim assigned to a Single cir Multiple Occupancy cell? ( I)_ _ Sin_gfo 20b 22) (2)_ _ o (2) _ _No {9)_ _ Unknown lf Catdiopullnona.ry Resuscitation was not provided on the victim prior to the arrival of tuedica1 personnel, briefl y Describe Reasons why it was not provided,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Did either correctional or medical taffutilize ari Automated External Defibrillator on rJ1e victi m? (2)_ _ o 23a) (9)_ _Unknown Did com;ctional taffinitiate Cardjopulmooary Re qscitation on \he·victini pri r 10 the arri al f medical persoMel? (l) _ _Yes 21b) (9)_ _ Unlmown If the icti m was .issigoed a multfple occupancy cell, Were other Inmates in the Cell ot the Time oftbe uicide? ( l )_ _Yes 2 I!!) (2)_ _ Mulliple (9)_ _Unk:now11 Was the victim under any type of Isolation or Segregation at ,the Time ofthe Suldde? ( l ) _Yes (-2)_ _No (?)_ _ Unknown 23h) Jfthe victim was under Isolation or Segregation atthe time of.th e suicide, what was Time Span between placement in [solation/Scgregation and th~ Suicide, 11nd Briefly Describe T pe and Circumsta11ccs of Isolation or Segregation._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 24a) Was the victim under Suicide Watch {See definitions on page 8) atthe Time of the uicide? ( l )_ _ Yes 24b) (2) _ _ o (9)_ _ Unknown lf th e- victim was under suicide watch at the ti me of tile suicide-, what was the Frequem.-y of Direct Visual Observation by Staff (ex:ch1ding any closed circui't televlsion monitoring and/or tmnate com1>anian/ inmate ob ervation aide)? ( I)_ _Continuous (,2)_ _ Every 5 Minutes (3)_ _Every 10 Mi nuteS 64 e ery 30 Minutes l6 _ _Every 60 Minutes 8)_ _0ther {Spi:cify_ __ _ _ _~ {5)_ _ National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later (4)_ _ Eivery 15 Minu tes 24c) It'the victim was wider suicide watch at the time of the suicide. was Closed Ciroiit Televuion Monitoring utilized as a method o f ot,servation? ( l )_ _Yes 24d) (2 _ _ o ff the victim was under sulcide watch at the time of the sui cide, was an Inmate Companion/ In.mate Obscrvation,Aidc (sec defini tion on page 8) utilized as a metl1od of observation? ( ! )_ _Yes 25) (2)_ _No (9)_ _Unknown o-Su.icide eontract (see definition on page 8) at .any time Did fac ility staff utilize a with the victim? l l)_ _Yes 2Qa) (9 _ _ Unknown 2)_ _No (9)_ _ Unknown Did the victim attend a Court He!lring or other Legal Proceeding in close pro imiW to the suicide? ( l )_ _ Yes (l)_ _No (9)_ _ Unknown '26b) If the victi m attended a court hearing or other legal proceeding in close proximity to the su icide, what was Time Span between the Beartng/Lcga] Proceeding and the Suicide, and Brieny Describe the Circumstances of the Court Hearing/Legal Proceeding? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 27a) Did the victim have II ( !)_ _Yes 27b) isit or Telephone Call in close proximfly to the suicide? (2)_ _No (9L____Unknown lft he victim had a visit ot telephone call in close proximi ty 10 the suicide. what as Time, pan between the VlsitffeJepbone Call and the Suicide, and Briefly Describe the Circumstances of the Visit/ Telephone Call?_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ 28a ) Was the victim ever As essed by a Qualified MenJal Health Professional see definitions on page 8) priot to the suicide? ( ! )_ _Yes 2.8b) (9)_ _Unknown Jt' the victim was asse-ssed, spedfy the Last Contact by a Qualified Menta] Health Professional prior to the suicide? (ff less than two days, indicate in hours.) _ _Hours 29a) (2)_ _No _ _Days _ _Weeks _ _Months Was a Mortality Review (see definitions on page 8) conducted fo llowing the suicide? ( ! )_ _ Yes {'2)_ _ 0 (9)_ _ Unknown Appendix B 65 29b) lfa mortality review was conducted, ,did the process offer any Possible Precipitating Factors (i.e.• circumstances which mny have caused 1hevictim to commit suicide)? If yes briefly list; _ _ __ __ 29c} Ira, mortality review wu conducted, did the process offcwan ecornmendations to Prevent Future Suicides? Jfyes, briefly list: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ PART C: FACIUTY CHARACTE.lUSTlCS 30) The Faeility is best described a a: (!)_ _Facility for Pre-Trial Detainee and Sentenced lnmates (2)_ _Temporary Holding or Pre-Trial Detention Facility (0 to 72 hours (3)_ _Pre-'ttial Detention Facility (over 72 ihours} 4)_ _0ther (Specify: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~ 31) At the time of the suicide, what was the rated Capacity and Population of the facility? (J )_ _ Capacit 32) The facility is Administered by a: Jl)_ _ State (2)_ _County 33) _ Yes (2 _ _No (2)_ _No At the time of the suicide, did the Intake Screening process include the ability to verify whether the Arresting/Transporting Officer Believed the Victim was at Risk for Suicide? (l ►_ 66 (2)_ _ o At the time of the suicide, did the Intake Screening process include the ability to verify whether the victim had been on Suicide Watcb, During a Prior Confinement? (l)_ _Yes 34c) (8)_ _0ther(Speclfy_ _ _ __, At the time of the suicide, did t_he faci1il)' have an Intake Screening process to Identify Su,icide Risk? l)_ _Yes 34b) (3)_ _Municipality 4 _ _Private Organization At the time of the suicide did the facility have a Written Suicide Prevention Policy? (l)_ 34a (2 _ _Population _ Y,es (2 )_ _ No National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later 3Sa) A the time of the soicide, had most (90% or more) correctional sta!Treceived uicide Prevention t'.raining'? (l)_ _Yes 35b (2)_ _No If.most correctional staff had received suicide prevention training, what was the Frequency imd Duration of tht Suicide Prevmtion Training at the time of the suic,ide? Frequency (!)_ _Yearly (8)_ _Other (Specify_ __ 36) (2 _ _No 5) Every 30 Minute (6) Every 60 Minutes (8)_ _0ther (Specify _ _ _ _ __, At the time of the suicide, wnich ofthefoll'owing Best De.~cribes Which Staff were Permitted to Downgrade and Discharge an Inmate from Suicide Watch? (J )_ _ Correctional (2)_ _Medical 38) (2)_ _No [fthe facility bad a suicide watch process at tbe time ofth~ suicide, what was the Fl"egueocy Level(s) of Direct isual Observation by Staff'? (Check all that appl , ) ( I )_ _Continuous (2)_ _Every 5 Minutes (3)_ _ Every 10 Minutes (4)_ _Every 15 Minutes 37c) umber) At the tin1e of the uicide, did the facility have a !(jcjde Watch process {excluding any clos()d circ1.1it television monitoring and/or inmate companion/inmate observation aide)? ( l)_ _Yes J7b) (02)_ _Minutes (Specify At the time of the suicide, had most (90% or more) correctional staff received Certification in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation? (l)_ _Yes 37a) (0 I )_ _Hours ( pecify Number) (3)_ _Mental Health (5)_ _.AII ofthe above t4)_ _Medical and/or Mental Health (&)_ _Other (Specify_ ) At the time of the suici'de, did the facility have a Housing process by \Vhich asulcidal inmate would be assigned to a safe, suicide-resistant, and protrusion-free cell? · (l)_ _Yes (2)_ _No OEFI JTION SUICIDE WATCH : The h:vel s1 of direct visual observation by staff that is given to an inniate identified as being at risk of suicide. Excludes closed circuit television. inmate compt1nion/inmate ·observution aide, or any other non-smlTmonitoring. INMATE COMPANJO /INMATE OBSERVA TJO ATOE: A designation by which another inmate is entrusted w.i!h the responsibility of providing observation to an inmate on suicide watcn. 0-HARM/NO-S ICIDE CO TRACT: A verbal and/or written aweement between the inmate and facility staff/clinician fu wloiich the inmate provides as.suronce tlley will n t c mmlt uicide or eogage ln elf-Injurious behavfor; Appendix B 67 0 ALIFIED MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONAL: An individual by virtue of their education, credentials. and experience that is permitted by law to evaluate and care for the mental health needs of patients. May include, but is no! limited lo, a psychiatrist, psychologist, clinical social worker, and psychiatric nurse. MORTALITY REVlEW: An inierdisctplinary commiuee process comprised of correctional, medical, and mental health personnel that examines the events surrounding the death to determine if the inctdent was preventable. The rev1ew process may lnch.tde recommendations aimed al reducing the opportunity of future deaths. THE FOLLOWING WILL 'BE USED FOR J1 TER AL PURPOSES ONLY: Completed by {name/title):_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Facility/Agency:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Address (street):_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ City;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _State: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Z_ip Code:_ _ __ Telephone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ E-Mail Address:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Date Completed: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Would you like to be placed on the mailing list to receive the Jail Suicide/Mental Health Update (a free quarterly newsletter devoted to jail suicide prevention and produced by the National Center oo Jnstitutions and Alternatives under contract with the National institute of Corrections, U.S. Justice Department) and receive notification of the findings from _ _No this National Study of Jail Suicides? _ _ Yes THANK YOU FOR YOUR COOPERATlO Plea e return this completed questionnaire in the enclosed bu iness- reply envelope within 30 days to: NCJA P.O. Box 111 Mansfield, MA 02048 or fas to NCI,<\ at: 508/33 7-3()83 or e-mail to: Lhayesta@msn.com 68 National Study of Jail Suicide: 20 Years Later U.S. Department of Justice National Institute of Corrections Washington, DC 20534 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 Address Service Requested www.nicic.gov PRESORTED STANDARD POSTAGE & FEES PAID U.S. Department of Justice Permit No. G–231