A temporary program for “dangerously mentally ill” patients has continued for five decades, despite calls from critics to provide better care. Soon, Idaho will be the only state still using prisons to house patients who face no criminal charges.

One night in March 1976, a young advocate for people with mental illness arrived at the Idaho statehouse with a warning.

Marilyn Sword urged lawmakers not to ratify a system that would ultimately lock away some of Idaho’s most debilitated psychiatric patients in the tiny, concrete cells of a maximum security prison — a kind of solitary confinement with no trial, no conviction and often no charges.

Idaho didn’t have any psychiatric hospitals secure enough for patients whose break with reality made them lash out in fear, anger or confusion. What it did have was a maximum security prison.

Sword said putting prison officials in charge, as lawmakers were contemplating, could violate the civil rights of patients committed by the court for hospitalization. She said it would burden them with “the double stigma of being mentally ill and then being placed in a maximum security unit at the penitentiary,” minutes of the meeting show.

Idaho leaders plunged forward with the legislation anyway.

  • ApostleO@startrek.website
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    11 months ago

    As an Idaho resident, I know any time our state is in a headline, it’s gonna be bad. I don’t even get how our state is like this.