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NEW YORK — In corrections systems nationwide, officials are grappling with decisions about geriatric units, hospices and medical parole as elderly inmates – with their high rates of illness and infirmity – make up an ever increasing share of the prison population.

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At a time of tight state budgets, it’s a trend posing difficult dilemmas for policymakers. They must address soaring medical costs for these older inmates and ponder whether some can be safely released before their sentences expire.

The latest available figures from 2010 show that 8 percent of the prison population – 124,400 inmates – was 55 or older, compared to 3 percent in 1995, according to a report being released Friday by Human Rights Watch. This oldest segment grew at six times the rate of the overall prison population between 1995 and 2010, the report says.

“Prisons were never designed to be geriatric facilities,” said Jamie Fellner, a Human Rights Watch special adviser who wrote the report. “Yet U.S. corrections officials now operate old age homes behind bars.”

The main reasons for the trend, Fellner said, are the long sentences, including life without parole, that have become more common in recent decades, boosting the percentage of inmates unlikely to leave prison before reaching old age, if they leave at all. About one in 10 state inmates is serving a life sentence; an additional 11 percent have sentences longer than 20 years.

The report also notes an increase in the number of offenders entering prison for crimes committed when they were over 50. In Ohio, for example, the number of new prisoners in that age group jumped from 743 in 2000 to 1,815 in 2010, according to the report.

Fellner cited the case of Leonard Hudson, who entered a New York prison at age 68 in 2002 on a murder conviction and will be eligible for parole when he’s 88. He’s housed in a special unit for men with dementia and other cognitive impairments, Fellner said.

A.T. Wall, director of the Rhode Island Department of Corrections and president of the Association of State Correctional Administrators, said he and his colleagues regularly exchange ideas on how to cope with the surging numbers of older prisoners.

“We are accustomed to managing large numbers of inmates, and it’s a challenge to identify particular practices that need to be put into place for a subset,” he said. “There are no easy solutions.”

Wall said prison officials confront such questions as whether to retrofit some cells with grab bars and handicap toilets, how to accommodate inmates’ wheelchairs, and how to deal with inmates who no longer understand instructions.

“Dementia can set in, and an inmate who was formerly easy to manage becomes very difficult to manage,” he said.

States are trying to meet the needs. Some examples:

-Washington state opened an assisted living facility at its Coyote Ridge prison complex in 2010, with a capacity of 74 inmates. It’s reserved for inmates with a disability who are deemed to pose little security risk.

-The Louisiana State Penitentiary has had a hospice program for more than a decade, staffed by fellow prisoners who provide dying inmates with care ranging from changing diapers to saying prayers.

-In Massachusetts, a new corrections master plan proposes one or more new facilities to house aging inmates who need significant help with daily living. Some critics object, saying inmates shouldn’t get specialized care that might not be available or affordable for members of the public.

-Montana’s corrections department is seeking bids for a 120-bed prison that would include assisted-living facilities for some elderly inmates and others who need special care.

In Texas, legislators have been considering several options for addressing the needs of infirm, elderly inmates. State Rep. Jerry Madden, chairman of the House Corrections Committee, said no decisions have been made as the experts try to balance cost factors and public safety.

“You can’t just generalize about these prisoners,” he said. “Some are still extremely dangerous, some may not be…. Some you wouldn’t want in the same assisted living facility with your parents or grandparents.”

Fellner, who visited nine states and 20 prisons during her research, said corrections officials often were constrained by tight budgets, lack of support from elected officials, and prison architecture not designed to accommodate the elderly.

She noted that prison policies traditionally were geared to treat all inmates on an equal basis. So it may not be easy for prison officials to consider special accommodations for aging inmates, whether it be extra blankets, shortcuts to reduce walking distance, or sparing them from assignments to upper bunks.

The report said the number of aging prisoners will continue to grow unless there are changes to tough-on-crime policies such as long mandatory sentences and reduced opportunities for parole.

“How are justice and public safety served by the continued incarceration of men and women whose bodies and minds have been whittled away by age?” Fellner asked.

One of the problems facing prisons is that many of their health care staff lack expertise in caring for the elderly, according to Linda Redford, director of the geriatric education center at the University of Kansas Medical Center.

“It’s a big struggle for them to keep up,” said Redford, who has helped train prison staff and inmates in geriatric care.

“They’re used to having to deal with issues of younger prisoners, such as HIV and substance abuse,” she said.

Under a Supreme Court ruling, inmates are guaranteed decent medical care, but they lack their own insurance and states must pay the full cost. In Georgia, according to Fellner’s report, inmates 65 and older had an average yearly medical cost of $8,565, compared with $961 for those under 65.

Redford said the challenges are compounded because inmates’ health tends to decline more rapidly than that of other Americans of the same age due to long-term problems with drug use and poor health care.

“In the general population, 65 doesn’t seem that old,” Redford said. “In prison, there are 55-year-olds looking like they’re 75.”

Many states have adopted early release programs targeted at older inmates who are judged to pose little threat to public safety. However, a 2010 study by the Vera Institute of Justice in New York City found the laws were used infrequently, in part because of political considerations and complex review procedures.

Redford said a common problem is finding nursing homes or other assisted-living facilities that will accept released inmates who have family to live with.

“Nursing homes don’t want former felons,” she said. “Some states are looking at starting long-term care facilities outside prison for that could take care of parolees.”

For inmates who are terminally ill and have no close family on the outside, it’s probably more humane to let them die in prison if there’s a hospice program available, Redford said.

“The inmates who are volunteering are at those guys’ sides when they die – they’re really committed to making the last days as comfortable as possible,” Redford said. “They’re not going to get that on the outside.”

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  • Anonymous

    “You can’t just generalize about these prisoners,” he said. “Some are still extremely dangerous, some may not be…. Some you wouldn’t want in the same assisted living facility with your parents or grandparents.”

    “Nursing homes don’t want former felons,” she said. “Some states are looking at starting long-term care facilities outside prison for that could take care of parolees.”

    This is very important to remember. The prisoners were given lengthy sentences for a reason.

  • Anonymous

    This is a hard call because these are prisoners, and they may still be dangerous. I still feel sorry for the very elderly though. Getting old is a b***h and it is heartbreaking to see an elderly person who doesn’t have the proper care.

    The positive side of this is that these types of stories can be used as cautionary tales for others who may be on their way to prison, if they don’t hurry and clean up their act.

  • Patricia Steuben

    I think if the prison systems would put in place some type of program whereby prisoners can excercise more and get fresh air……i.e. caged areas with excercise equipment and/or indoor areas where they can excercise their body and minds, these prisoners may suffer less medical/mental problems. Keep them busy. If that is not feasible then people on the outside have a chance to start a new business that will work nationwide……assisted living compounds for ex-felons that are truly disabled physically & mentally.

  • Anonymous

    I dont know what to think really..lol.The running around and jumping all over the place i did at 8 years old seems like a million years ago when i have to sit down and rest now after a 2 mile walk.I walk 4 miles a night and i usually have to sleep 8 hours after that…

    Im just saying all of this because a persons body tends to slow down after a number of years.I dont think you’re the same threat you were 50 years ago when you could grab a person and kill them for looking at you wrong or saying something that upset you..Alot of stupid aggresive anger issues tend to go away with age therfore making hard people become soft…Most O.G guys i know that are in their 50′s will tell you in a minute they’re not half as bad as they were in their 20′s.So it would only make sense that if you add at least 20 more years on that person had to have slowed down by 80% by then…lets not forget to mention the health problems that follow a person after 60.Not too many people are that healthy at 70 or 80.A lot of people are on some type of something!

    They may want to get out there and do dirt , but what can anyone do when they have to adhere to a strict guidelines for their health?If you wanna live you have no choice but to follow your doctors orders..and im quite sure drinking, having massive sex with hoochies, standing out on the corner all day, eating bad high sodium food,running from the police or at least having to watch out for the police isnt something your typical 80 year old excon is able to do on the regular..you do have exceptions though, some people never leave the game.They just sit out on the sidelines coaching while the newbies take over.

    I think if a person is such a danger to society at 80 years old maybe they should keep that person locked up.Thats what they pay those Psychs over 100 grand a year for..to figure these things out.Theres no real easy answer to this, i guess it just depends on the individual.Monitoring the persons behavior in jail and what they’ve done over the last 5 or 6 decades should be a suffient amount of time to determine which inmates would be deserving of paroll i’d like to think.There in there with them for 50 plus years(at least their files).Surely they could come to some type of conclusion as to who they think would make it and who wouldnt on the outside

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/jazzwatch/ jazzwatch

    Unfortunate in BOTH cases they’re BOTH costing money……unfortunately thsoe in chargee don’t to SPEND any on them…especially the latter….

  • Anonymous

    The United States Prison Industrial Complex is the NEW AMERICA SLAVE TRADE!!!!!!!!

    This SLAVE TRADE is connected to money….. states spend to keep people locked up,

    PROFITS made through cheap prison labor and for-profit prisons……

    excessive charges inmates and families pay for everything from tube socks to phone calls,

    and lucrative cross country shipping of inmates to relieve overcrowding and RENT a CELL programs……..

    The majority of prisoners are Black and Latino…….

    though they are minorities in terms of their numbers in the population……

  • Anonymous

    Though not all prisoners are jailed for violent crimes, they still pose a threat. This is true even for the senior and elderly group. Persons in this population segment can be an especially greater threat to themselves; dementia and Alz patients are often ‘exit-seeking’, which means that they often try to leave a facility due to their confused state. They regress and may regress to a point where they may replicate past threatening behaviors. Those who are cognizant may attempt to steal anyway…You just can’t co-mingle these inmates with the regular population or expect them to age in prison, which obviously cannot meet their special needs.

    The aging population has it tough, no matter their situation.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_JH5ASYZ3HCR6HZ6Z62M5CCRENI truthseeker

    they are going to do something about this quick and in a hurry. why? because these old prisoners are going to cut into the profits to be made in america’s prison industrial complex. who is going to pay for the medical care? do you loose your medicare if convicted of a felony? lots of questions.

  • Anonymous

    The police state/slave trade doesn’t care if a person is a senior or not, they just want captives to fill the prisons (concentration camps). The cops don’t hesitate to taser, handcuff, brutalize, and incarcerate grandmothers, and little children, especially if they are Black. There are far, far too many so called “crimes” that are on the books. If you forgot your driver’s license and left it at home, and they pull you over, it is a felony in some jurisdictions, meanwhile the cops can torture and kill with impunity, and that is legal.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/courtneyR/ courtneyR

    PRISONS were never designed to be geriatric facilities.

    well ,what the hell did they think would happen ,when they were giving life sentences or long sentences to young inmates? their are people that should be locked away for sure. but they also should of built a system with this in mind.

    I swear,common sense is all the sense you really need.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/courtneyR/ courtneyR

    then you should watch forensic science,who the F$#% did I marry,investigative report,etc. just because they are old, doesnt mean that they arent a danger. unless, he’s in a bed ,tied up and in a coma, i dont trust it. :)

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/jazzwatch/ jazzwatch

    To the WOULD BE FUTURE criminals to beeee: don’t do the crime, or that’s YOUR behind……

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