Counseling the Dually Diagnosed Female offender
Counseling the Dually Diagnosed Female offender
Counseling the Dually Diagnosed Female Offender
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Counseling the Dually Diagnosed Female Offender
Massachusetts Correctional Institution – Framingham (MCI-Framingham} is the Massachusetts Department of Corrections only committing institution for female offenders. It is located in Framingham, Massachusetts, a large town located midway between Worcester and Boston. The prison was once known as “Framingham State Prison”. MCI Framingham is the official name, and is favored.( Beckerman, A. (2002)
MCI-Framingham is a medium security correctional facility for female offenders. Several References note it as the oldest female correctional institution, which is still in operation, in the United States. It opened in 1877.
The prison houses both state and county offenders, as well as those awaiting sentencing. There are prisoners of a variety of classification levels. Sixty three percent of the inmates are there for non-violent offenses, most often involving drugs. There are few, if any, cells available to hold female prisoners elsewhere in the state, even pre-trail. As the only facility for female offenders, the prison is reported to be the most overcrowded in the state. Three-quarters of the women in this prison are mothers.( Beckerman, A. (2002))
Since women are a small percentage of the total number of the incarcerated, womens prisons have been seen as something of an “add-on” to the mens prison system. Typically they offer poorer facilities and fewer therapy, education, and job-training programs than mens prisons. Such programs can reduce an inmates sentence, yet many female prisoners cannot participate in them. This means that women will leave prison without the vocational or life skills that might reduce the likelihood that they will return. And the poor quality of mental health care for a population in which one-third is estimated to suffer from serious mental illness is a crime in itself. (Bloom, B. (2004))
In the early days of MCI-F, women could be imprisoned for disobeying their husbands, drunkenness, adultery, prostitution, or simple homelessness. As Clara Barton, superintendent at Framingham in the 1880s, remarked, “three-fourths of the women in this prison are neither convicted of, nor sentenced for, crimes deemed worthy of trial by jury, but rather offenses against the good order and customs of society. [These] are not so much crimes against others as against the offender herself.” Today, Rathbone remarks, “men are still punished mostly for crimes against property and people while the majority of women continue to be punished for transgressions against conventional morality, namely, for having sex and getting high.” (Bloom, B. (2004))
The demographics are shifting in this regard, driven by a sharp increase in the rate of property offenses such as embezzlement, fraud, and forgery committed by women. But Rathbone has a point. In 2002, about 38 percent of women in state prisons were doing time for drug or public-order violations–a category that includes prostitution, weapons violations, and drunk driving–compared to 28 percent of men. Whats more, just over half of men in state prisons are serving time for violent crimes, while only one-third of women are there for similar offenses. So crime–or at least punishment–remains very much a gendered affair in the United States. (Chesney-Lind, M., & Immarigeon, R. (2004)) About 4,000 women are admitted to MCI-Framingham each year. Their histories typically are riddled with trauma and abuse. Incarceration commonly exacerbates existing mental health problems, resulting in self-destructive behaviors such as suicidal ideation and self-inflicted harm. Many inmates also have substance abuse histories and/or have engaged in behaviors (such as sharing needles) that put them at risk for transmission of infectious diseases.( Kampfner, C. J. (2005))
The number of women in United States prisons and jails has been increasing for the past decade. At the end of 1993, there were more than 55,000 women incarcerated in federal and state prisons. These women accounted for 5.8 percent of the total state and federal prison population and 9.3 percent of the county jail population. Between 1980 and 1993, the growth rate