Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Mental Health and the Juvenile Justice System: Where Has History Taken Us?

American Journal of Psychiatry(2017)

Cited 1|Views2
No score
Abstract
Back to table of contents Next article ArticleNo AccessMental Health and the Juvenile Justice System: Where Has History Taken Us?Divya Kiran Chhabra, M.D.Divya Kiran ChhabraSearch for more papers by this author, M.D.Published Online:1 Oct 2017https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp-rj.2017.121001AboutSectionsView articleView PDFView EPUB ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InEmail View articleJuvenile justice is a system designed to navigate youth crime via police, court, and correctional involvement, but history has shaped and given this system the responsibility to also function as a vast mental health care system. Understanding this system’s past helps to highlight changes that must be made for its future.Historical ContextFrom ancient Greek civilization to English Common Law, the precedents to the American system, youth offenders were punished as adults, and although this has largely changed, a gray area clouds the way children are viewed in criminal justice today (1). In the early 1800s, with the introduction of child psychodynamics in America, the field recognized that children do not have the same moral capacity as adults (2). Childhood consists of unique developmental stages, including adolescence (3). As child poverty rates increased during the 1800s, reform movements decriminalized delinquency by removing youths from the adult justice system to “treat” youthful offenders rather than punish them (4). Children were placed with families in rural areas, houses of refuge, reform schools, and group cottages (5).Juvenile Justice in the United StatesIn the 1960s, due to rising crime rates, the juvenile justice system shifted from a community-based system to a punitive-based system, straying from the original vision (6). Over the next 30 years, harsher punishments were given in an endeavor to prevent homicides, as part of the “get tough” movement and the “war on drugs” during President Ronald Reagan’s administration (7). Simultaneously, public mental health services for children decreased, and this rerouted youths into the criminal justice system (including the adult system), which is now primarily comprised of correctional facilities (8).Until the 1990s, reliable studies on mental health statistics in the juvenile justice system were scarce (9, 10). Federally mandated research and investigations on mental health services in the system were conducted for the first time in 1998, revealing inadequate mental health care and screenings in several states (11). It was also during this time that recognition of the mental health needs for all youths grew, and leaders realized that previous estimates of the prevalence of “emotional disturbance” in this population were low (12, 13). Lastly, until this point, a stark disparity existed in the legal mental health rights between youths and adults in the criminal system (14). Although the need for large-scale change in the punitive system was acknowledged during this time, the problems were deeply rooted and still affect our system today.Clearly, psychiatry and the juvenile criminal justice system are historically intertwined. According to the Northwestern Juvenile Project, a longitudinal study that began in 1998 in Cook County, Illinois, 66% of males and 74% of females arrested and detained in the area had a mental disorder, with one in 10 having thoughts of suicide or a prior suicide attempt. Ninety-three percent of youths in this study had experienced physical, sexual, or verbal trauma, and 47% of females and 51% of males suffered from a substance use disorder (15). Similar results have been replicated in other studies, including a national study administered by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention that surveyed more than 7,000 youths in over 200 centers nationally (16). These findings are startling considering that 1.3–2.2 million youths were arrested annually between 2012 and 2016 (17). According to the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, although the juvenile crime rate has decreased nationally, the rate of children and adolescents processed in the system yearly has significantly increased since 1985, and an increased proportion of cases result in detention (18). Research has shown that long-term confinement in the justice system alone is detrimental to mental health (19). This is distressing, since those entering the system have higher rates of mental disorders to begin with (15).Mental health screening, assessment, and treatment became mandatory in the early 2000s (20). However, a gap persisted between policy and implementation, and these policies alone are not an adequate resolution for an incredibly entrenched and multifactorial disparity. In 2006, the Federal Advisory Committee on Juvenile Justice reported that lack of appropriate staffing, lack of administrative capacity, insufficient research, heavy caseloads for social workers, lack of wraparound services, and lack of vigilant monitoring of adherence to mental health guidelines and policies are all barriers to successful implementation (21).ConclusionsMore recently, the system has been working toward a more rehabilitative and collaborative, versus punitive, approach, and, slowly, legal changes have been made (22). However, more needs to be done. Screening and assessments must be conducted earlier in the process and become completely standardized and research-based (20). Research has shown that diversion programs and evidence-based treatment services, such as wraparound services and various types of therapy, are more efficacious when they are centered in the community rather than use of these treatments within the system (8, 20). Moving forward, the juvenile justice system should play a larger role in connecting children and adolescents with child protection, education, and outside child welfare agencies.Key Points/Clinical PearlsHistorically, youth offenders worldwide were punished as adults, and it took a much deeper understanding of development before reform occurred.Despite our knowledge of development, politics and history in America have shaped the juvenile justice system to, in many ways, still treat children as adults and to function as a vast mental health care system.Research that has been conducted in the juvenile justice system reveals that children involved with this system have higher rates of suicidality, trauma, and other mental disorders, and the long-term confinement these children undergo is even more detrimental.Mental health screening, assessment, and treatment became mandatory in the system in the early 2000s, but a gap still exists between policies and intervention.Dr. Chhabra is a second-year resident in the Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco.References1. Nybell LM, Shook JJ: Childhood, Youth, and Social Work in Transformation: Implications for Policy and Practice. Edited by Finn JL. New York, Columbia University Press, 2009, p51 Google Scholar2. Mintz S: Huck’s Raft: A History of American Childhood. Cambridge, Mass, Harvard University Press, 2004, pp 75–93 Google Scholar3. Lathrop J: Introduction, in The Delinquent Child and the Home: Study of Delinquent Wards of the Juvenile Court of Chicago. Edited by Breckinridge S,Abbott E. New York, Russell Sage Foundation, 1912, pp 11–20 Google Scholar4. West E: Growing Up in 20th Century America: A History and Reference Guide. Westport, Conn, Greenwood Press, 1996, pp 15, 31, 42,54 Google Scholar5. Finley LL: Juvenile Justice. Westport, Conn, Greenwood Press, 2007 Google Scholar6. Alexander M: The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. New York, New Press, 2012 Google Scholar7. Sickmund M, Snyder HN: Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 1999 National Report. Pittsburgh, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 1999. https://www.ncjrs.gov/html/ojjdp/nationalreport99/toc.html (Accessed November 2016) Google Scholar8. Grisso T: Adolescent offenders with mental disorders. Future Child 2008; 18:143–164 Crossref, Google Scholar9. Otto R, Greenstein J, Johnson M, et al.: Prevalence of mental disorders among youth in the juvenile justice system, in Responding to the Mental Health Needs of Youth in the Juvenile Justice System. Cocozza JK, ed. Seattle, Wash, National Coalition for the Mentally Ill in the Criminal Justice System, 1992, pp 90–95 Google Scholar10. Cocozza JJ, Skowyra KR: Youth with mental health disorders: issues and emerging responses. Juvenile Justice 2000; 7(1):2–13 Google Scholar11. Center for Mental Health Services: Inventory of Mental Health Services in Juvenile Justice Facilities, Halfway Houses and Group Homes (Survey). Rockville, Md, US Department of Health and Human Services, 1998 Google Scholar12. Friedman RM, Katz-Leavy JW, Manderscheid RW, et al.: Prevalence of serious emotional disturbances in children and adolescents. Mental Health 1996; 71–89 Google Scholar13. Hartman L: Children are left out. Psychiatr Serv 1997; 48(7):953–954 Google Scholar14. Woolard JL, Gross SL, Mulvey EP, et al.: Legal issues affecting mentally disordered youth in the juvenile justice system, in Responding to the Mental Health Needs of Youth in the Juvenile Justice System. Cocozza JK, ed. Seattle, Wash, National Coalition for the Mentally Ill in the Criminal Justice System, 1992, pp 91–95 Google Scholar15. Teplin LA, Abram KM, Washburn JJ, et al.: The Northwestern Juvenile Project: overview. OJJDP Juvenile Just Bull 2013; 13:1–16 Google Scholar16. Sedlak AJ, McPherson K: Survey of youth in residential placement: youth’s needs and services. OJJDP Juvenile Just Bull 2010; 4:1–10 Google Scholar17. Puzzanchera C, Adams B, Kang W: Easy Access to FBI Arrest Statistics, 1994–2007. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 2014. Washington, DC, US Department of Justice. http://www.ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/ezaucr/ (Accessed December, 2016) Google Scholar18. Harms P: Detention in delinquency cases, 1989–1998. https://www.prisonpolicy.org/scans/ojjdp/fs200201.pdf Google Scholar19. Petrosino A, Guckenburg S, Turpin-Petrosino C: Formal systems processing of juveniles: effects on delinquency. Crime Just 2010; 6 Google Scholar20. Underwood LA, Washington A: Mental illness and juvenile offenders. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2016; 13(2):228 Crossref, Google Scholar21. McKinney K: Federal Advisory Committee on Juvenile Justice Annual Report 2004: Recommendations Report to the President and the Congress of the United States. Washington, DC, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 2005 Google Scholar22. Stoddard-Dare P, Mallett C, Boitel C: Association between mental health disorders and juveniles’ detention for a personal crime. J Child Adolesc Ment Health 2011; 16:208–213 Crossref, Google Scholar FiguresReferencesCited byDetailsCited ByRelationships Matter: The Role Transition Specialists Play in Youth’s Reentry From the Juvenile Justice System28 August 2020 | Career Development and Transition for Exceptional Individuals, Vol. 44, No. 1 Volume 12Issue 10 October 01, 2017Pages 2-3 History Published online 1 October 2017 Published in print 1 October 2017
More
Translated text
Key words
juvenile justice system,mental health,justice system
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined